The Director-General of National Automotive Design and Development Council (NADDC), Mr. Jelani Aliyu, has said that a number of African countries and governments have started developing electric vehicle policies that will determine how best to promote the sector.
Speaking at the ongoing London EV Show in Britain on Thursday on ‘Why e-Mobility is necessary for Africa’, Aliyu noted that some of the policies are geared towards addressing areas such as local production of electric vehicles, charging infrastructure and making sure there is accountability toward the mining and processing of raw materials in the continent.
Reiterating the need for Africa to embrace electric vehicles, Aliyu stated that the continent could not advance at a faster pace with only vehicles with fossil fuel and called for advanced decentralised industrialisation on the African continent.
According to him, e-mobility will be able to provide the necessary logistics and transportation that will expeditiously advance Africa, without destroying its natural environments and without contributing to the negative effect of climate change on the continent.
“That is why e-mobility is important to Africa and to the world, so that Africans will, in a sustainable manner, have access to jobs, healthcare, education, markets and further social interactions,” the statement issued on Thursday in Abuja by NADDC, quoted Aliyu as saying.
Speaking on Nigeria’s efforts at promoting local production of electric vehicles, Aliyu said that NADDC had been working closely with relevant local automotive and investment companies on the production of the vehicles.
He added that while Hyundai Nigeria has successfully started assembling electric cars in Nigeria, with the Kona EV, other local automotive companies, such as Jet Systems Motors and Max-e have also developed electric vans and motorcycles.
“We decided to go the sustainable way and we built four solar-powered electric vehicle charging stations to prove that the concept could work.
“We made three of them 100 per cent solar-powered and sited them at three universities so that technology transfer would begin to happen.
“It was to serve as platforms that manufacturers of electric vehicles and related products from around the world could leverage to collaborate in coming up with more e-mobility solutions,” he said.
Aliyu, therefore, called on investors to come to Nigeria, saying that the country presents a virtually clean slate for innovation.
GIK/APA