1st Edition

Renewable Energy Law in Sub-Saharan Africa Assessing Ghanaian Renewable Energy Development and Policy

By Nana Asare Obeng-Darko Copyright 2024

    This book contributes to the broader discussion on the development of renewable energy sources for a clean and sustainable energy to drive sustainable growth, energy security and sustainable development.

     

    Focusing on sub-Sahara African perspectives, with Ghana as the central case study, this book focuses on how regulatory regimes can be designed to achieve renewable energy targets for electricity production. Exploring the regulatory rationales behind the government’s intervention in the Ghanaian renewable energy sector, it examines whether the regulatory measures adopted by the Ghanaian government are sufficient to attract adequate investment to meet renewable energy integration targets. Assessing the regulatory frameworks of the renewable energy sectors of The Gambia and Nigeria, the book compares these countries to the regulatory approaches to renewable energy development in Ghana. Arguing that there are significant regulatory issues impeding renewable energy development in Ghana, with wider consequences across sub-Saharan Africa, the book suggests solutions which can establish a robust and an effective regulatory framework to achieve renewable energy developmental targets.

     

    A comprehensive read, this volume will appeal to scholars and researchers of sustainable development, law and legal studies, environmental laws, development economics, applied industrial economics, energy security, African economy, public policy and regulatory policy. It will also be of interest to professionals and practitioners in policy circles and research think tanks.

     

    1. Introduction

     

    2. Explaining Regulation  

     

    3. Historical and Normative Contexts of Renewable Energy

     

    4. Ghanaian Renewable Energy and the Electricity Sector

     

    5. The Regulation of Ghana’s Renewable Energy Sector

     

    6. Regulatory Rationales and Approaches to the Ghanaian Renewable Energy Sector

     

    7. Regulatory, Legal and Policy Issues

     

    8. Comparison with other Countries in the Region

     

    9. Conclusion

     

    Biography

    Nana Asare Obeng-Darko is a sustainability law researcher at the Law Faculty of University of Lapland, Finland. He is also an affiliate researcher at Center for Climate Change, Energy and Environmental Law (CCEEL) of the UEF Law School, University of Eastern Finland. He holds a Doctor of Laws (LL.D.) in European Law from the University of Eastern Finland. His research interests include sustainability law, energy law, sustainable energy transitions, renewable energy regulation and sustainable development research. He has published widely and advises governments and other public authorities on policies promoting renewable energy and sustainable development.