Critical analysis of the future of energy sectors in Sub-Saharan Africa: the just energy transitions in Cameroon, Ghana, and Nigeria

Fopokam Tene, Magloire (A.A. 2022/2023) Critical analysis of the future of energy sectors in Sub-Saharan Africa: the just energy transitions in Cameroon, Ghana, and Nigeria. Tesi di Laurea in Climate-neutral & smart cities, Luiss Guido Carli, relatore Fernando Christian Iaione, pp. 102. [Master's Degree Thesis]

[img] PDF (Full text)
Restricted to Registered users only

Download (3MB) | Request a copy

Abstract/Index

Literature review. Energy communities and energy transitions in Sub-Saran Africa. Climate change in Cameroon. The Cameroon legal system and climate change. An overview of the Cameroon energy sector and how it is structured to address climate change. The current state of renewable energy generation in Cameroon, Ghana, and Nigeria. Adaptation policy metrics anticipating the effects of climate change in SSA countries. The main national actors. Relationship between the research, the literature, and come identified gaps. Methodology. Cameroon's renewable energy laws and policies. Government policies. Energy gap. Climate change in the Northern city-Garoua, Cameroon. Population dynamics in Garoua. The energy sector in Garoua, Cameroon. Renewable energy deployment support policies in Cameroon. Analysis of local level readiness assessment in the energy sector using the following tools. Data collection and analysis through interviews.

References

Bibliografia: pp. 80-83.

Thesis Type: Master's Degree Thesis
Institution: Luiss Guido Carli
Degree Program: Master's Degree Programs > Master's Degree Program in Digital Innovation and Sustainability (LM/SC – GIUR)
Chair: Climate-neutral & smart cities
Thesis Supervisor: Iaione, Fernando Christian
Thesis Co-Supervisor: Mori, Simone
Academic Year: 2022/2023
Session: Summer
Deposited by: Alessandro Perfetti
Date Deposited: 29 Jan 2024 13:44
Last Modified: 29 Jan 2024 13:44
URI: https://tesi.luiss.it/id/eprint/37783

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

Repository Staff Only

View Item View Item