For Africa, light is it!
| Akinwumi A. Adesina, President of the African Development Bank |
Chidi Aja
Light up and power Africa was the battle cry of Akinwumi A.
Adesina, President of the African Development Bank in Davos, Switzerland, at
the Reception on the New Deal on Energy for Africa and the launch of the
Transformative Partnership on Energy for Africa.
In his remark at the event, Adesina told his audience,
including Africa’s leaders that it is time to join together with strong resolve
to solve Africa's energy challenge. “Regular supply of power, which is taken
for granted in developed countries, is a luxury in Africa - in the 21st
century. Some 137 years after Thomas Edison developed the light bulb, Africa is
still in the dark.”
Painting a gory picture of the continent’s electricity
consumption, he said per capita electricity use in Africa averages 181 kwH
compared to about 13,000 KwH in the United States of America and over 6,500 KwH
in Europe. Africa's poorest pay some of the highest energy costs in the world.
A woman living in northern Nigeria pays up to 80 times per unit of energy
compared to a resident in London or New York. Today, over 645 million Africans
do not have access to electricity - and 700 million go without access to clean
cooking energy, with 600,000 dying each year from indoor pollution from
reliance on biomass for cooking.
“A continent that accounts for 16% of the world's population
has 53% of all the total population without electricity in the world. Africa is
known for the darkness of its towns and cities. Kids go to school and cannot
learn well because there is no electricity. Lives are at great risks in
hospitals because there is no electricity. Small businesses, which account for
over 90% of the private sector, cannot operate optimally. Africa loses about 4%
of its GDP to lack of electricity.”
Adesina declared that Africa is simply tired of being in the
dark. “It is time to take decisive action and turn around this narrative: to
light up and power Africa - and accelerate the pace of economic transformation,
unlock the potential of businesses, and drive much needed industrialization to
create jobs.”
He stated that the Africa Progress Panel Report 2015, which
was developed under the Chairmanship of Kofi A. Annan - our energy champion for
Africa - called for action to solve the electricity challenge facing Africa. According
to him, the New Deal on Energy for Africa is a direct response to this call,
adding that President Obama's Power Africa initiative is already responding to
this challenge, with its focus to double up electricity supply in Africa.
Akinwunmi said the convergence of several development
partners is a sign to working together under the Transformative Partnership on
Energy for Africa to deliver on the New Deal on Energy for Africa.
The goal of the New Deal on Energy for Africa, he said, is
to accelerate universal access to electricity in Africa by 2025. Africa has
enormous energy potential, especially for renewable energy - almost unlimited
solar potential (10 TW), abundant hydro resources (350 GW), wind (110 GW) and
geothermal energy sources (15 GW). “All that is just potential - and Africa
cannot light up homes or power industries by potential. Nothing is more
important for Africa's growth and development than unlocking Africa's enormous
energy potential.
“The New Deal on Energy for Africa plans to achieve this by
focusing on the following targets:
• On-grid
generation: to deliver sufficient on-grid energy for industrial, commercial and
residential consumption through the building of 160 GW of new generation
capacity. This is equivalent to 800 power plants with capacity of 200 MW each.
• Transmission
and on-grid connections: increase on-grid transmission of power and the
delivery of 130 million new grid connections.
• Off-grid
generation: deliver 75 million off-grid connections. This will be equivalent of
creating 300 companies with the similar scale to that of M-KOPA in Kenya, the
most successful African off-grid "Pay-as-you-go" solar system.
The ambition is high - and so it should be: we must not have
low ambitions for Africa. China installs 4 GW of electricity every four weeks.
Vietnam achieved an annual connection of 1.1 million people and achieved almost
universal access to electricity within 10 years. Bangladesh connected 660,000
people per year via off-grid systems. What will it take to light up and power
Africa? By achieving 11 times what Bangladesh did will deliver the 75 million
off-grid connections. It will take achieving 12 times what Vietnam did to
achieve 130 million new grid connections. And it will take1/3 of China's annual
electricity installations to deliver the 160GW of grid supply. Africa can do
this!
Five principles will guide the action on delivering on the
New Deal on Energy for Africa:
• All
energy partners should raise their level of investments in the energy sector.
• African
countries should increase the share of their GDP devoted to the energy sector:
raising this from the current 0.3% to 3.4% will unlock $50 billion per year.
• Establish
a Transformative Partnership on Energy for Africa - a platform (which we are
launching today) that will coordinate action among partners - public and
private - for innovative financing.
• Support
African countries on much needed energy sector reforms, regulations, reforms of
the utilities and implementation of cost-reflective tariffs. These are critical
for leveraging private sector capital investments.
• Raise the
level of political will and action to light up and power Africa.
We at the African Development Bank will put our money where
our mouth is. The Bank plans to invest US $12 billion in the energy sector over
the next five years and leverage US $40-50 billion into the energy sector. The
Bank has already worked with the African Ministerial Conference on the
Environment and the African Union and the G7 (especially Germany and France) to
develop and launch the Africa Renewable Energy Initiative at the COP 21 in
Paris. The Africa Renewable Energy Initiative expects to deliver 10 GW of
electricity by 2020 and 300 GW by 2030 - with a commitment of $10 billion from
G-7 countries. The African Development Bank and the World Bank plan to work
together - at scale- to help towards ending Africa's energy deficit. I am
delighted that President Jim Kim of the World Bank will be joining me tomorrow
at the press conference on the New Deal on Energy for Africa.
Such is the power of partnerships under the Transformative
Partnership on Energy for Africa: do more, faster, at scale - and together!
As I look around this
room tonight, I see even more partners - from governments, private sector,
civil society - who are committed to the New Deal on Energy for Africa. Together,
we can light up and power Africa. Let us hear the voices of the 645 million
Africans without electricity - and 700 million who need clean cooking energy.
Let us rise up and take action. Let us light up and power
Africa!”
Comments
Post a Comment