Africa’s first football pitch lit solely by the players’
movements has been inaugurated in Lagos, the economic hub of power-starved
Nigeria, at a ceremony attended by US-Senegalese rapper Akon.
The technology, invented by a young British engineer,
consists of placing electronic tiles under the artificial turf, which is
converted into power by kinetic energy.
Each time a player steps on a tile, seven watts of
electricity are generated and sent to a battery.
Rapper and song writer Akon (C) lies and applauds with
football players during the unveiling of Africa's first kinetic football pitch
in Lagos, on December 10, 2015. The pitch combines solar energy with innovative
technology that harnesses the energy of player's movement and converts into
renewable electricity. The Lagos unveiling is second to the first solar powered
pitch commissioned in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in 2014 and, also conceptualised
by Laurence Kemball-Cook. / AFP / PIUS UTOMI EKPEI
Rapper and song writer Akon (C) lies and applauds with
football players during the unveiling of Africa’s first kinetic football pitch
in Lagos. AFP.
The stored power helps to feed six powerful but low
consumption LED floodlights that shine on the pitch. Solar panels around the
pitch complement the technology, stocking electricity throughout the day.
The system has already been installed at a football pitch in
a favela in Rio de Janeiro, in football-mad Brazil, which hosted the 2014 World
Cup.
“It’s brilliant,” said Kusagba Oluwadamilola, an 18-year-old
sports student, who plays for the football team at the Federal College of
Education (Technical), where the pitch has been set up.
“It’s going to be really useful. Until now we couldn’t play
at night,” he told AFP.
The man behind the technology, Laurence Kemball-Cook, 30,
launched his own company, Pavegen, four years ago.
Since then, the invention has been installed in 150
locations across the globe from parks and airports to shops and even dance
floors.
Inspiring new generations with new technology is essential,
he said, particularly inNigeria where residents often have just a few hours of
power a day because of an erratic electricity supply.
As a result, households and companies are forced to rely on
heavily polluting generators.
Kemball-Cook said the pitch would not only help “create a
community” but also showed the need to diversify Africa’s energy mix.
“We need solar, we need other solutions as well… we need it
right now, we don’t want to be using these fossil fuel generators. We need to
be using more renewable sources of power,” he said.
With the initial cost of solar energy high, Kemball-Cook said
he hoped to bring down the cost of the tiles by mass production to as little as
$50 (45 euros) per square metre through economies of scale.
Rap superstar Akon made a surprise appearance at the launch
of the newly built pitch on Thursday to the delight of the students.
He has been involved in renewable energy projects with his
Akon Lighting Africa, created in 2004, whose objective is to electrify Africa
with solar energy.
The project is already running in 15 countries and he is
aiming for 34 by 2020.
Chief executive officer and founder Pavegen Laurence
Kemball-Cook jumps holding solar light during the unveiling of Africa's first
kinetic football pitch in Lagos, on December 10, 2015. The pitch combines solar
energy with innovative technology that harnesses the energy of player's
movement and converts into renewable electricity. The Lagos unveiling is second
to the first solar powered pitch commissioned in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in 2014
and, also conceptualised by Laurence Kemball-Cook. / AFP / PIUS UTOMI EKPEI
Chief executive officer and founder Pavegen Laurence
Kemball-Cook jumps holding solar light during the unveiling of Africa’s first
kinetic football pitch in Lagos, AFP .
“I am proud to be here,” said the singer and producer, who
was born in the United States but spent his childhood in Senegal.
“Climate change makes things different today,” he said, as
delegates to a UN conference in Paris thrashed out a historic agreement to cut
global warming.
The Pavegen tiles are “an extraordinary concept for Africans
who play football every day,” he added.
Football is the king of sports in Nigeria, whose national
team the Super Eagles has won the African Cup of Nations three times, as well
as gold at the 1996 Olympic Games.
“This is an amazing concept… to be able to generate energy
while you’re playing football to me is a no brainer to help build new renewable
sources and also to support the entrepreneur that comes up with this invention,”
he added.
The development of renewable energy could create businesses
and jobs in Africa, he added.
Anglo-Dutch oil giant Shell, partners of Pavegen, financed
the installation of the pitch.
The company is the main oil explorer in Nigeria — Africa’s
number one producer — and has been widely criticised for the environmental
impact of its activities in theNiger Delta region.
Pavegen and Shell have learnt lessons from the Rio pitch,
where residents objected to having to pay by the hour. There will be no charge
at the Lagos pitch.
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