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Boosting Africa’s energy transition – initiatives, funding and investment

By Kieran Whyte and Angela Simpson, Partners, Johannesburg; Lamyaa Gadelhak, Partner, Helmy, Hamza & Partners, Baker McKenzie Cairo; Adnan Doha, Partner, Baker McKenzie Dubai; and Matthew Martin, Foreign Legal Specialist, Baker McKenzie North America.

Forty-three per cent of Africa’s population does not have access to electricity, mostly in sub-Saharan Africa, according to a recent report by the International Energy Agency. Increasing access to a clean, decarbonized, decentralised energy supply is therefore critical for the continent. The growing focus on energy transition can benefit Africa in numerous ways, including that the continent is already in the process of harnessing its vast supply of renewable energy to generate power, and is also gearing up to increase trade in its large store of critical minerals, needed for the global energy transition. To enable this transition, countries across Africa are implementing policy that takes into account the energy crisis and the need for a renewable energy supply that addresses climate change and the commitments made under the Paris Agreement. In addition, many countries in Africa, and other jurisdictions, are launching initiatives and providing funding, investments and grants for African renewable energy projects.

Funding and grants

Countries in Africa and around the world have all recently reaffirmed their commitment to impact-building and strategic, long-term projects that benefit energy transition and promote economic stability in Africa.

For example:

Investment

Access to power on the continent has been hampered by the lack of access to competitive funding, the dire state of Africa’s utilities infrastructure, and the need for energy policy and legislation to be adapted to boost investment. However, new systems and networks are now being designed around future environmental stressors and energy demands, without having to consider the limitations of old infrastructure. With the use of mobile technology and the lack of existing electricity transmission networks, these developments are now providing an opportunity for African communities to gain access to power by leapfrogging the traditional model of centralized generation and transmission of power.

New and cost-effective solutions that utilize renewable energy, green hydrogen, battery storage and smart power technologies, as well as the global drive towards a secure energy supply that addresses climate change and stimulates economic growth, are all leading to innovative private equity (PE) and M&A investment opportunities. For example, PE funds in South Africa are investing in the country’s energy transition by backing the independent power producers that supply renewable energy to South Africa’s power grid, as well as ancillary companies in the clean energy sector.

However, according to Bloomberg, clean energy investment in Africa is concentrated in a handful of markets – South Africa, Egypt, Morocco, and Kenya. These countries were the recipients of three-quarters of all renewable energy asset investments, totalling USD 46 billion, in the continent since 2010.

It is hoped that the many initiatives that focus on boosting access to renewable energy in Africa will result in a whole continent approach, switching on access to power for the forty-three percent of the African population who are not yet benefitting from the region’s renewable resources.

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