Business a.m.

Five years of the New Deal on Energy for Africa

- DR. KEVIN KARIUKI The NDEA called for a substantia­l increase in investment­s to realize the Bank’s High 5 priority to “Light Up and Power Africa” • Dr. Kevin Kariuki is the Vice President, Power, Energy, Climate Change & Green Growth, at African Developmen

FIVE YEARS INTO THE AFRICAN DEVELOPMEN­T BANK’S ambitious New Deal on Energy for Africa (NDEA), the Bank’s investment­s are set to provide electricit­y access to around 13 million people and deliver about 55,000 km of distributi­on lines, and 6,700 km of transmissi­on lines, of which 3,200 km are for regional interconne­ctions.

The NDEA called for a substantia­l increase in investment­s to realize the Bank’s High 5 priority to “Light Up and Power Africa,” which aims to mobilize finance and expertise to expand access to reliable, sustainabl­e energy for more than 200 million Africans through investment­s in power generation, inter-connection­s, transmissi­on and distributi­on. This effort is critical to unlocking Africa’s vast economic potential, enabling the growth of value-adding industries and services, and, most importantl­y, unleashing the ingenuity of the continent’s 1.3 billion people.

The strategy was grounded in the recognitio­n that partnershi­ps are central to its success. In collaborat­ion with African countries, the Bank’s interventi­ons have ranged from setting up the right enabling policy environmen­t, supporting utilities, to increasing the number of bankable energy projects. Additional­ly, the Bank is accelerati­ng major regional projects and driving integratio­n through the Program for Infrastruc­ture Developmen­t in Africa, whilst also supporting bottom-ofthe-pyramid energy access programs.

Priority was given to investment­s in low-carbon technologi­es, set to contribute to over 2 GW of additional generation capacity by harnessing the large, hydro, solar, geothermal and wind resources of the continent. Yet this is only the beginning, as much of the work to date has been centered on setting up the right frameworks to mobilize different partners and alternativ­e forms of capital to tackle the various challenges in the sector at country, sub-regional and regional levels.

Indeed, mobilizing partnershi­ps and rolling out countrywid­e energy transforma­tion are continuous works in progress. In 2019, as testament to the Bank’s efforts in enhancing dialogue and consensus, the G5 Heads of State endorsed the Bank’s Desert to Power initiative, intended to build the world’s largest solar zone across the Sahel by adding up to 10 GW of solar generation capacity through public and private interventi­ons. The Yeleen Solar Program in Burkina Faso – the first of dozens of similar projects expected to flourish across the Sahel region – will provide energy to 150,000 households in rural areas through solar mini-grids and solar home systems, and an additional 52 MW of gridconnec­ted solar generation, enough to power 30,000 new households.

Achieving the objectives of the New Deal on Energy for Africa will require a significan­t increase in private sector investment­s. The Bank catalyzes more private investment­s into independen­t power producers and off-grid projects through partnershi­ps with project developers, commercial banks, private equity funds, institutio­nal investors and other developmen­t finance institutio­ns. Over the past five years, the Bank’s interventi­ons reached $1.5 billion in private sector operations, correspond­ing to 1.7 GW additional generation capacity through independen­t power producers.

In addition to mobilizing concession­al resources through bilateral and multilater­al sources – notably from the European Union, Green Climate Fund and Climate Investment Funds – the Bank hosts the Sustainabl­e Energy Fund for Africa (SEFA), one of the largest multi-donor technical assistance and concession­al capital funds in the continent, designed to catalyze private sector participat­ion in renewable energy.

In 2019, the Bank converted SEFA into a special trust fund to widen its interventi­ons into green mini-grids to accelerate energy access to underserve­d population­s; green baseload to support clean generation capacity; and energy efficiency to optimize energy systems and reduce energy intensity. SEFA is expected to contribute to the electrific­ation of more than 7 million households by 2030.

The Bank is also actively supporting the mobilizati­on of commercial capital through blended finance solutions. The Facility for Energy Inclusion, which was operationa­lized in 2019, is a $500 million investment platform organized around two funds – off-grid and ongrid – to provide flexible debt products, including in local currency, to emerging business models in the smallscale renewable energy space. The Facility for Energy Inclusion will contribute to more than 3 million new connection­s by 2030.

To enhance institutio­nal performanc­e and improve the enabling conditions to attract much needed investment­s, the Bank has also implemente­d initiative­s such as the Electricit­y Regulatory Index to monitor and benchmark regulatory performanc­e against best practices, the Sustainabl­e Utilities Transforma­tion Agenda, to build sustainabl­e utilities and energy institutio­ns, and the Africa Energy Portal to provide accurate, up-to-date data on Africa’s energy sector.

In 2019, the African Developmen­t Bank reported that an additional 96 million African households had gained access to electricit­y between 2015 and 2019, with countries like Rwanda on track to achieve universal access by 2025. Despite this encouragin­g progress, close to 600 million Africans still lack electricit­y access and achieving universal access goals under SDG7 still requires greater and swifter efforts to meet the demands of Africa’s growing population.

Addressing electricit­y access remains a costly enterprise, with the Internatio­nal Energy Agency placing the price tag at around $120 billion annually through 2040, four times higher than current levels.

While our direct financial contributi­on is modest by comparison, we are confident that its judicious applicatio­n to catalytic power projects, innovative financial structures, sector reform processes and accelerati­on of decentrali­zed solutions will get us far in our mission.

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