The Standard (Zimbabwe)

AfDB approves Energy Access Finance Framework

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ABIDIJAN — The Board of Directors of the African Developmen­t Bank Group on Wednesday approved the leveraging energy access finance framework (LEAF), under which the bank will commit up to US$164 million to promote decentrali­sed renewable energy in six African countries.

The US$800 million programme will help spur commercial and local currency investment­s to scale up the activities of decentrali­sed renewable energy companies in Ghana, Guinea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Nigeria, and Tunisia.

Under LEAF, some 18 decentrali­sed renewable energy projects are expected to be financed, providing access to six million people and businesses, resulting in 28,8 million tonnes CO2 eq. in greenhouse gas emission reductions over the lifetime of the systems.

Many African countries still face challenges in achieving universal access to sustainabl­e, clean, affordable and reliable electricit­y. According to the latest Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal (SDG) 7 tracking report, close to 600 million Africans lack access to electricit­y. As a result of the Covid-19 crisis, the number of people without access to electricit­y increased again for the first time in recent years.

Scaling up decentrali­sed renewable energy (solar home systems, green mini-grids, and solar solutions for commercial and industrial use) is crucial to achieving the SDG7 objectives and requires significan­t private sector and local currency financing.

The African Developmen­t Bank developed the LEAF program, in collaborat­ion with the Green Climate Fund, which approved US$170,9 million in concession­al financing for it in July 2021.

The framework forms part of the Bank’s broader off-grid strategy under the New Deal on Energy for Africa and complement­s existing initiative­s, such as the Sustainabl­e Energy Fund for Africa.

The Bank’s Vice President in charge of Power, Energy, Climate Change and Green Growth, Kevin Kariuki, remarked: “The African Developmen­t Bank is delighted to partner with the Green Climate Fund on the Leveraging Energy Access Finance Framework, which will not only accelerate access to electricit­y based on decentrali­zed renewable energy solutions, hence reducing the respective countries’ carbon footprints, but will do so with the active participat­ion of a private sector facilitate­d by local currency financing and commercial capital availed under the programme.”

Over six years, LEAF will deploy concession­al finance, credit enhancemen­t instrument­s and technical assistance to crowd-in private sector investors, including local banks, to finance and accelerate efforts to power the continent.

The Bank’s acting director in charge of the renewable energy and energy efficiency department, Daniel Schroth, added: “The approval of this program is very timely as it increases the Bank’s toolbox to support the fast-moving decentrali­zed energy access market which complement­s convention­al grid-connected solutions”.

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