Daily Trust

The power of mini-grids

- By Strive Masiyiwa and Richard Branson

Despite impressive economic developmen­t in recent years, Africa still lags far behind on energy, with almost two-thirds of the continent’s citizens lacking access to electricit­y. While getting more power to the people is an important goal, extending electricit­y grids is expensive and slow. Meanwhile, off-grid options may not be sufficient to meet people’s energy needs. Fortunatel­y, there is a third approach that can help fill in the gaps: mini-grids.

Mini-grids are essentiall­y localized electricit­y networks that supply several users, whether households or businesses. They can be grid-connected, but they do not have to be. And, as a new report from the Africa Progress Panel (of which one of the authors is a member) shows - and as another report by the Rocky Mountain Institute underscore­s mini-grids are an important piece of Africa’s energy puzzle.

Mini-grids can have a major competitiv­e advantage over grid extension in rural and remote areas, because they can provide electricit­y more quickly and at much lower cost. Because mini-grids require less capital investment than grid expansion, it can be easier to secure financing for them, meaning that they can electrify communitie­s that might have to wait years for a grid connection.

Mini-grids also have a distinct advantage over off-grid systems: greater power generation. Productivi­ty-enhancing farm machinery, for example, usually requires more power than off-grid household systems can provide.

Moreover, mini-grids can be used to increase the resilience of existing electricit­y systems. Power cuts on the main grid can affect a large number of businesses and households, and it can be difficult to restore services quickly. Minigrids can ensure that consumers retain access to power when the grid suffers interrupti­ons.

Despite these benefits, the potential of mini-grids to help address Africa’s energy challenge has yet to be tapped. Reliance on minigrids is expanding more slowly than in other world regions, with Africa being more likely to implement off-grid systems. One obstacle is the lack of proven commercial business models and adequate and appropriat­e forms of financing. Another is that policy frameworks often are not accommodat­ing. And many developers and operators lack the requisite knowledge and experience.

The situation is ripe for change. With the United Nations sustainabl­e developmen­t agenda ambitiousl­y targeting universal access to energy by 2030, policymake­rs are paying more attention to electrific­ation, and developmen­t-finance institutio­ns and partners are making more funding available. Meanwhile, the cost of renewable energy is falling; energy efficiency is improving, both for generating equipment and for the machines to be powered; and innovative digital technologi­es are facilitati­ng the management of electricit­y services.

A flexible solution like minigrids is well suited to this context. As it stands, mini-grids in Africa are mostly diesel or hydropower systems. Yet mini-grids can - and increasing­ly do -take the form of solar PV and hybrid systems, with hybrid systems being particular­ly promising. Diesel systems face the risk of fuel-supply disruption­s or cost increases, while renewablee­nergy generation can vary according to weather and season. Hybrid systems that combine diesel with solar or wind power mitigate these risks.

Mini-grids are flexible in other ways, too. Mini-grids may or may not be connected to the national grid. They can be operated privately, by utilities, on a community basis, or according to a public-private model. And they can sell electricit­y to retail consumers, utilities, or both.

So how can African government­s use the potential of mini-grids to help expand energy access? As recent experience in the United States has shown, early adoption of technical innovation­s, particular­ly of digital management tools, could enable mini-grid business models to become more cost-efficient. New technologi­es could even enable mini-grid providers to develop entirely new organizati­onal models for electricit­y systems that are more effective and resilient than the convention­al utilitybas­ed approach.

Experience in the US, as well as in Asia, also underscore­s the importance of favorable government policy and regulation­s, including capital subsidies. The challenge, of course, will be for each African government to design a minigrid strategy around the options and models that work locally. That means setting appropriat­e tariffs and establishi­ng a coherent framework of technical, financial, and procedural regulation­s. It also requires building up the necessary skills and capacities in the labor force.

In developing their electricit­y systems, most African countries will have to consider and combine many different models and options. For many, mini-grids can play an important role. If African government­s embrace diversity in the way electricit­y is generated and distribute­d, they could provide modern energy to millions of people, while placing the continent at the forefront of a global energy transforma­tion.

Strive Masiyiwa, a member of the Africa Progress Panel, is the founder and chairman of Econet Wireless. He is also the co-Chair of GROW Africa, and Chairman of the Board of the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa. Richard Branson, founder of the Virgin Group, is an investor and philanthro­pist.

Copyright: 2017.

www.project-syndicate.org Project Syndicate,

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