African Business

Solar investors bet on DRC

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Two major solar energy projects have been announced in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) as investors target one of Africa’s least electrifie­d markets, writes David Thomas.

A consortium led by Gridworks, a UK government­backed developer and investor in African electricit­y, has signed a deal with the government of DRC to create a new company, Moyi Power, to build greenfield solar-powered distributi­on and generation infrastruc­ture for half a million Congolese.

The initial investment for the three sites will be at least $100m, funded with a mixture of equity from the consortium, debt provided by developmen­t finance institutio­ns and capital grants from donors and DFIs.

The consortium, which includes French firm Eranove and Spain-based AEE Power, has signed concession agreements with the Ministry of Hydraulic Resources and Electricit­y to develop, build and operate three large scale, solar-hybrid off-grid utilities to supply the cities of Gemena, Bumba and Isiro. The consortium was selected as the winning bidder for the 22-year concession under the Essor Access to Energy (A2E) Initiative after an internatio­nal tender process run by the government with the support of the UK.

The developmen­t and financing process is expected to take at least 14 months, with constructi­on expected to take 18 months thereafter. The firm anticipate­s an initial deployment of 14 MW PV panels, 40 MWh battery storage and 4 MW diesel generation, and aims to connect more than 23,000 households and commercial consumers across the three sites in the first five years. The plant will then need to double its size every three to five years.

Opportunit­ies for local suppliers

The new company has committed to offer opportunit­ies to local suppliers, consultant­s, and employees in the developmen­t, constructi­on and operation of the solar-hybrid infrastruc­ture.

“In serving these three cities, Moyi Power has the critical mass and regulatory support that is missing from most mini-grid models. It can set an example to the off-grid industry, pushing down costs for consumers and attracting longterm capital from investors,” says Gridworks chief executive Simon Hodson.

Off-grid developmen­ts

Separately, Swedish-based investment platform Trine has partnered with Altech Group, a DRC-based firm, to accelerate investment­s in solar in the DRC and expand access to clean, reliable, and affordable energy for off-grid and poorgrid households.

The new partnershi­p totals €5m ($5.98m) across multiple tranches. The first debt financing round will finance over 3,000 solar home systems and is expected to reach nearly 14,000 people with clean energy across 21 of DRC’s 26 provinces. Later debt financing rounds will follow in 2021.

Less than 20% of DRC citizens have access to electricit­y, according to World Bank data from 2019, with almost all current electricit­y generation coming from hydropower. The Internatio­nal Energy Agency reports that solar energy will account for up to 5 TWH of DRC energy in 2040 compared to around 30 TWH for hydro.

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