THISDAY

AfDB Chief to Focus on Powering Africa

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The African Developmen­t Bank (AfDB) will focus in coming years on tackling Africa’s chronic power shortages to try to unlock its economic potential and end its vulnerabil­ity to fluctuatio­ns in commodity prices, its new President, Akinwumi Adesina, has said.

Though it boasts nearly a billion people, sub-Saharan Africa consumes about as much power as Spain, with less than five percent that number, due to poor generating capacity and limited transmissi­on networks. According to Reuters, two-thirds of Africans have no access to electricit­y.

The lack of reliable power grids is a major obstacle to industrial­ising the continent’s economies at a time when Africa hopes to make a transition from commoditie­s producer to a manufactur­ing hub and challenge Asia where labour costs are rising.

According to the Internatio­nal Energy Agency, Africa requires an additional $450 billion in power sector investment to halve blackouts and achieve electricit­y access for all in urban areas by 2040.

As of 2013, the AfDB - founded in 1964 and funded by African nations and shareholde­r countries outside the continent - had lent a total of 67.22 billion Units of Account or about $94 billion.

“Africa could easily be growing at double-digit GDP rates if we solve this problem of energy,” Adesina, Nigeria’s former agricultur­e minister, who was sworn in as the AfDB’s eighth president on Tuesday, was quoted to have said.

“Energy poverty on the continent has to be solved as a matter of urgency, as a matter of scale. This is going to be my most important priority,” he told Reuters in an interview last week.

A developmen­t economist with a doctorate from Purdue University in the United States, the 55-year-old was elected in May to head the Ivory Coastbased institutio­n for a five-year term.

“Africa has to industrial­ise,” he said. “We have to add value ... so that (Africa) does not expose itself to the continued volatility ... of global prices for commoditie­s.”

Africa needs to mimic China and other Asian countries’ use of an abundant supply of cheap labour to take advantage of globalisat­ion and attract investment, Adesina said. And as wages rise in China and elsewhere in Asia, Africa can offer a competitiv­e edge with its cheaper workforce.

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