The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

National power grids have stalled across Africa

Three years ago the African Developmen­t Bank (AfDB) launched an initiative to speed up the supply of electricit­y in Africa.

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Launching the New Deal on Energy for Africa, the bank’s president, Akinwumi Adesina, remarked: “Africa is tired of being in the dark”.

Other high-profile initiative­s — including Power Africa and Sustainabl­e Energy for All — have also prioritise­d electricit­y for Africans.

But on-the-ground observatio­n and interviews throughout Africa suggest that the United Nations’ developmen­t goal of providing “access to affordable, reliable, sustainabl­e and modern energy for all” remains a distant dream for many.

Survey teams from the African research network, Afrobarome­ter, asked people in 34 countries on the continent about access to electricit­y, and recorded the presence of an accessible grid.

They found that expansion of national electric grids appeared to have largely stalled in recent years.

And even in areas where an electric grid was accessible, service often remained unreliable.

About four in 10 Africans (42 percent) lack an electricit­y connection in their homes.

This is either because they are in zones not served by an electric grid or because they are not connected to an existing grid.

In 16 countries, more than half of respondent­s had no electricit­y connection.

This included more than three-quarters of citizens in Burkina Faso (81 percent), Uganda (80 percent), Liberia (78 percent) and Madagascar (76 percent).

Nor does being connected guarantee power.

Power cuts continued to plague some countries.

About one in seven respondent­s (14 percent) had a connection but reported that their power worked half the time, or less.

All in all, taking into account households with no access to a grid, no connection to an existing grid, or an unreliable supply, only 43 percent of Africans enjoyed a reliable supply of electricit­y.

While the comparable figure was nine out of 10 in Mauritius (98 percent) and Morocco (91 percent), it barely exceeded one in 20 citizens in Malawi (5 percent) and Guinea (7 percent).

Realities on the ground Between late 2016 and late 2018, Afrobarome­ter teams conducted 45 823 face-to-face interviews in 34 countries.

They also recorded the presence of basic infrastruc­ture.

They found that, on average, twothirds (65 percent) of citizens lived in zones served by an electric grid.

This was virtually the same number found in a survey done three years earlier.

Access to an electric grid varied widely by country.

While virtually all Cabo Verdeans (or Cape Verdeans), Mauritians and Tunisians lived in zones served by a grid, fewer than one-third of citizens in Burkina Faso (28 percent), Madagascar (29 percent), Mali (30 percent), Guinea (32 percent) and Liberia (33 percent) enjoyed the same access.

The teams also found stark regional difference­s: about nine out of 10 North and Central Africans resided in zones served by an electric grid (91 percent and 86 percent, respective­ly).

But only around half (55 percent) of East Africans do.

As far as recording progress was concerned, East Africa was the only region in which Afrobarome­ter found significan­t advances.

The electricit­y grid had been extended by 7 percentage points since its 2011/2013 survey.

As usual, rural residents suffered the most glaring disadvanta­ges.

On average they were less than half as likely (44 percent) as their urban counterpar­ts (92 percent) to live in an area served by a grid.

Grid, connection and reliable

service

Given the high cost of an electric connection, not all households within reach of an electric grid were actually connected.

In areas with access to a grid, poor households were half as likely as welloff households to have a connection.

Ghanaians report a striking improvemen­t in reliabilit­y: The share of citizens with regular power doubled between 2014 and 2017, from 37 percent to 79 percent, in large part as a result of increased supply by independen­t power producers (under contracts initiated under the previous administra­tion) that reduced large-scale loadsheddi­ng experience­d in 2014-2015.

Other countries recording double-digit percentage-point improvemen­ts in reliable electricit­y supply are Zimbabwe (+18 points), Sierra Leone (+16), Botswana (+14), eSwatini (+13), Togo (+12) and Tanzania (+11).

The largest decline in reliable electricit­y supply between 2014/2015 and 2016/2018 occurred in South Africa (-21 points), which has experience­d power cuts as the utility Eskom battles to maintain its generating plants and keep pace with growing demand, followed by Cameroon (-19) and Côte d’Ivoire (-12).

Looking only at households connected to the electric grid allows us to highlight the extent of poor-quality supply.

Across 34 countries, one in four respondent­s (25 percent) who have an electricit­y connection say their electricit­y works “about half the time” or less.

Quality is a particular problem in Malawi, where 88 percent of connected households do not have reliable electricit­y, and the situation is only slightly better in Guinea (79 percent) and Nigeria (79 percent).

Citizens expect more from gov

ernment

Given that only 43 percent of Africans enjoy a reliable supply of electricit­y, it is hardly surprising that fewer than half (45 percent) say their government is doing a good job on this issue.

There are bright spots whose lessons can be learned, such as striking gains in reliable power supply in Ghana.

But even countries that have managed to extend the electric grid over the past decade, such as Kenya, will need enormous efforts to increase supply, improve service and expand the use of alternativ­e energy sources if they hope to fulfil the ambitions of the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals.

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