World Bank Partners With AfDB To Provide Electricity For 300 Million Africans By 2030

By Clement Alphonsus

The World Bank Group and the African Development Bank Group have disclosed partnership on an ambitious effort to provide at least 300 million people in Africa with electricity access by 2030.

The World Bank Group seeks to connect 250 million people to electricity through distributed renewable energy systems or the distribution grid, while the AfDB Group will support an additional 50 million people.

Access to electricity is a fundamental human right and is foundational to any successful development effort..

While commenting on the initiative, President of the World Bank Group, Ajay Banga, noted that, “Electricity access is the bedrock of all development. It is a critical ingredient for economic growth and essential for job creation at scale. Our aspiration will only be realized with partnership and ambition. We will need policy action from governments, financing from multilateral development banks, and private sector investment to see this through.”

According to the World Bank, the partnership demonstrates its determination and that of the AfDB Group to be bolder, bigger, and better at tackling one of the most pressing challenges in Africa.

It stated, “For the World Bank Group to connect 250 million people, $30 billion of public sector investment will be needed, of which IDA, the World Bank’s concessional arm for low-income countries, will be critical. In addition, governments will need to put in place policies to attract private investment and reform their utilities so they are financially sound and efficient with tariff mechanisms that protect the poor.

“Connecting 250 million people to electricity would open private sector investment opportunities in distributed renewable energy alone worth $9 billion. Beyond that, there would be substantial opportunities for private investments in grid-connected renewable energy needed to power economies for growth."