energies Article Wind Power Potentials in Cameroon and Nigeria: Lessons from South Africa Abdullahi Abubakar Mas’ud 1,*, Asan Vernyuy Wirba 2, Jorge Alfredo Ardila-Rey 3, Ricardo Albarracín 4, Firdaus Muhammad-Sukki 5, Álvaro Jaramillo Duque 6, Nurul Aini Bani 7 and Abu Bakar Munir 8,9 1 Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering, Jubail Industrial College, P.O. Box 10099, Jubail Industrial City 31261, Saudi Arabia 2 Department of Management and Information Technology, Jubail Industrial College, P.O. Box 10099, Jubail Industrial City 31261, Saudi Arabia;
[email protected] 3 Department of Electrical Engineering, Universidad Técnica Federico Santa María, Santiago de Chile 8940000, Chile;
[email protected] 4 Department of Electrical, Electronic and Automation Engineering and Applied Physics, Senior Technical School of Engineering and Industrial Design (ETSIDI), Polytechnic University of Madrid (UPM), Ronda de Valencia 3, 28012 Madrid, Spain;
[email protected] 5 School of Engineering, Robert Gordon University, Aberdeen AB10 7GJ, UK;
[email protected] 6 Department of Electrical Engineering, Universidad de Antioquia, Cl. 67 #53 - 108, 050010 Medellín, Antioquia, Colombia;
[email protected] 7 UTM Razak School of Engineering and Advanced Technology, Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur 54100, Malaysia;
[email protected] 8 Faculty of Law, University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur 50603, Malaysia;
[email protected] 9 University of Malaya Malaysian Centre of Regulatory Studies (UMCoRS), Level 13, Wisma R&D, University of Malaya, 59990 Jalan Pantai Baru, Kuala Lumpur 50000, Malaysia * Correspondence:
[email protected]; Tel.: +96-653-813-8814 Academic Editor: Lieven Vandevelde Received: 23 February 2017; Accepted: 21 March 2017; Published: 27 March 2017 Abstract: Wind energy has seen a tremendous growth for electricity generation worldwide and reached 456 GW by the end of June 2016.