Kenya reaps the wind
Much needed energy to be generated by first wind farm to open atop the Ngong Hills.
NGONG, Kenya — From a distance the highlands look like a giant fist resting on the landscape, a series of knuckles forming the peaks of the Ngong Hills. From the top of the escarpment Kenya’s capital Nairobi spreads out to the east, the breathtaking Great Rift Valley to the west.
Maasai herdsmen shepherd their cattle across the hilltop pastures, some dressed in traditional colorful red tartan-print blankets, beads round their necks, earlobes hung with heavy rings, a stick in one hand and leather sandals on their feet.
Every afternoon the gentle morning breeze that sweeps up from the Rift Valley grows into a strong wind and by nightfall it has become a blustering gale. Now, Kenya’s government hopes to harness that power. Next month the country’s first wind farm will open on the top of the
Ngong Hills.
For now the six 165-foot tall steel shafts with their 82-foot fiberglass blades are shiny white, stark against the horizon, and motionless.
Jackson Odhiambo, 30, is an IT technician working for a company that hopes to bring fiber optic cables and broadband internet to Kenya for the first time later this year. One recent morning he had driven up to take a look at the turbines that now watch over the hills.
“These will generate power which is good and with wind it doesn’t pollute the air or disturb people with the noise. There are a lot of advantages,” he said.
“Kenyans won’t mind the landscape being changed because there is such a need for cheap power,” Odhiambo went on, adding, “and they look nice.”
Nearby a bunch of cows nibbled at the grass beneath one of the gleaming white towers. Their owner — a herdsman who had walked all the way from neighboring Tanzania with his cattle — had no idea what the strange sculptures were for but thought they looked great, a glimpse
of the future.
Hezron Ng’iela certainly thinks the wind turbines are the future. He is the senior projects engineer for wind and renewable energy at KenGen, the state-owned power company responsible for the wind farm at Ngong and, if tests go well, at 11 more sites across Kenya.
“We have in Kenya a lot of wind potential, probably enough to sustain us for a number of years if we exploit it properly,” Ng’iela enthused. “Right now we are gathering data with a view to developing other wind farms in the future.” That will include a further seven turbines on
top of the Ngong Hills.
“We are going more and more green,” he said excitedly.
Recent on Kenya:
Kenya battles recurring drought
Tristan McConnell - Kenya - November 7, 2009 10:51 ET
Countries of East Africa and Horn of Africa plagued by successive years of low rainfall.
Obama extends sanctions against Sudan
Tristan McConnell - Kenya - October 29, 2009 06:03 ET
New policy encourages dialogue but presses for change.
Annan presses Kenya to arrest instigators of violence
Tristan McConnell - Kenya - October 16, 2009 14:23 ET
Government urged to take action against those who organized post-election ethnic killings.
Drought hits Kenya's wildlife
Tristan McConnell - Kenya - October 16, 2009 05:52 ET
Millions in East Africa are on food aid, but the animals are still dying.
Migingo Island at center of border dispute
Tristan McConnell - Kenya - October 2, 2009 06:10 ET
Kenya and Uganda vie over a tiny fishing center in Lake Victoria.
TV puppet satire skewers Kenya's leaders
Tristan McConnell - Kenya - September 23, 2009 07:35 ET
Popular show raises controversial issues and provokes debate.
'Black Hawks' return to Somalia
Tristan McConnell - Kenya - September 15, 2009 12:03 ET
Helicopter attack shows dramatic shift in US policy and comes with some peril.
Turning flip-flops into art
Tristan McConnell - Kenya - September 10, 2009 13:25 ET
Kenyans recycle beach debris into colorful toys and wearable jewelry.
Kenya reaps the wind
Tristan McConnell - Kenya - August 27, 2009 11:43 ET
Much needed energy to be generated by first wind farm to open atop the Ngong Hills.
Kenya's 'Wabenzi' tribe threatened
Tristan McConnell - Kenya - August 22, 2009 16:25 ET
Opinion: Austerity measures to curb Benz-driving government officials
Fleeing Somalia
Finbarr O'Reilly - Africa - August 9, 2009 13:12 ET
Multimedia: A Somali musician's story in song and photos.
Who owns the Nile?
Theodore May - Egypt - August 8, 2009 11:36 ET
On a river that flows upward, Egypt lives downstream ... but that doesn't mean it goes thirsty.
Kenya's Mau forest under threat
Tristan McConnell - Kenya - July 30, 2009 15:15 ET
Historic forest is economic lifeline to country but is being rapidly eroded.
Interview: Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga
Mark Scheffler - Kenya - July 23, 2009 21:30 ET
Despite contrary evidence, Odinga claims Kenya's relations with the White House are cordial.
Africa's moment?
Mort Rosenblum - Worldview - July 7, 2009 07:25 ET
Opinion: Hints of light in a not-so-dark continent
Many African diamonds still bloody
Tristan McConnell - Kenya - June 25, 2009 16:33 ET
Kimberley Process can identify where diamonds originate but it is largely ignored.
Interview with Kenya's prime minister
Mark Scheffler - Kenya - June 5, 2009 10:01 ET
Newsmaker Interview: Raila Odinga
Mark Scheffler - Kenya - June 4, 2009 20:59 ET
Fighting rages in Mogadishu
Tristan McConnell - Kenya - May 20, 2009 17:14 ET
Islamic rebels challenge Somali government's control of capital city.
Watch GlobalPost videos:
Reporter's Notebook
America’s top Africa diplomat has written to 15 Kenyans telling them they will be banned from traveling to the U.S. if they continue to block...Read more >
Days after U.S. Special Forces killed a wanted Al Qaeda terrorist in Somalia’s south, Islamist militants have made a deadly strike right into...Read more >
It’s proving a torrid year for Kenya’s police and security forces. Today New York-based Human Rights Watch released a report detailing...Read more >
Featured: Special Projects
After the Fall:
20 years since the Berlin Wall came down
Life, Death and the Taliban:
Videos and stories
Study Abroad:
Students report from the road
Living in the Shadows:
An intimate look at China's migrant workers
A World of Trouble:
The global economy in 20 hotspots
Global Blogs:








Comments:
No Comments.
Login or Register to post comments