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Electricity Increasing generation capacity to 3000 MW
October 2011
         

The Grand Projects in Cameroon

Electricity, Roads, Energy and Health
Electricity Increasing generation capacity to 3000 MW

By 2020, Cameroon will expand its installed electricity capacity to 3,000 MW. Tapping the hydropower of its river systems is the most cost-effective way to put its structural deficits behind. Dams on the drawing board include Lom Pangar (30 MW), Memve’ele (201 MW), Nachtigal (330 MW), Song Mbengue (950 MW), Grand Ngodi (475 MW), Nyanzom (375 MW), Kikot (350-550 MW), Njock (270 MW), Song Ndong (250-300 MW), Warak (75 MW) and several others. Grand Eweng (386 MW) is part of a subset of projects with sub-regional energy implications.

Roads More than 2,175 miles of roads to be tarred


The lack of roads to market is one of the determinants of poverty in Cameroon. The Ministry of Public Works has announced plans to tar 2,175 miles of roads by 2020. According to studies, any delays in the road program would cost the country 4 per cent of GDP over the next 10 years, or CFA 50 billion (£66.9 million) in revenue. Currently, only 10 per cent of the country’s road network of 34,175 miles is asphalted. Bringing road density from 0.17 miles to 0.22 miles could turn out to be one of the most effective ways the Government is fighting poverty.
Roads More than 2,175 miles of roads to be tarred
Energy Alternative sources to complement oil and gas reserves

Despite peaking in 1986 at 185,000 barrels per day (bpd), oil production still accounts for one-third of Government revenue. The country also has proven natural gas reserves estimated at 110 billion cubic metres, 5 per cent of which are developed. In terms of hydroelectric power, it is second in Africa after the Democratic Republic of Congo. With an average solar radiation of six kilowatt hours per square metre in the north, solar energy is no moot point. Meanwhile, in the mining sector, resources such as iron, cobalt bauxite, zinc, gold and diamonds lie largely untapped.

Health A new four-year health plan and free mosquito-repellant nets


Minister of Public Health Andre Mama Fouda says the Government’s 2011-2015 National Strategic Health Development Plan is crucial to meeting the countrywide health care delivery improvements in line with the Millennium Development Goals. The latest plan follows on from the previous 2001-2010 initiative that set similar goals of widening access to medications by the public. In addition, Prime Minister Philemon Yang launched the national campaign in August for the free distribution of 8,654,731 long-lasting insecticidal nets to all families as a means of fighting malaria.

CAMEROON PROJECT TEAM: Fernando de Delas, Mina Catherine Lakrafi
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