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Africa’S Grand Power Grid Ambition: A Continent Divided Over Unity
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Africa is chasing an electrifying dream: to unify its fragmented power grids into a single, continent-wide electricity market. If successful, this bold initiative could light up the lives of 1.3 billion people across 55 countries.
It could also create one of the largest electricity markets on Earth and position Africa as a global energy powerhouse. But behind the promise lies a story of ambition, division, and daunting challenges.
The African Continental Master Plan (CMP ), adopted in 2021, envisions connecting five regional power pools-Maghreb, West Africa, Central Africa, East Africa, and Southern Africa-into a seamless grid by 2040.
For nations like Kenya, Ethiopia, and Ghana, this plan represents hope for economic growth and energy independence. Ethiopia and Kenya have already built a $1.26 billion high-voltage electricity highway to exchange renewable energy.
West African countries like Ghana and Senegal are also moving forward under the West African Power Pool (WAPP), with $55 million in World Bank backing to synchronize their grids.
But not everyone is on board. South Africa and Nigeria-the continent's two largest economies-are hesitant. South Africa's aging infrastructure and rolling blackouts have left it focused on fixing its domestic grid before looking outward.
Africa's Energy Challenges
Nigeria faces a different crisis: only 60% of its electricity is used due to inefficiencies and non-payment issues plaguing its power sector. Smaller nations like Chad and Malawi question whether they will see meaningful benefits from integration when their electricity consumption remains so low.
The challenges go beyond national politics. Africa's power grids lose up to 29% of transmitted electricity due to inefficiencies-nearly double the global average.
Public utilities operate at a loss in many countries, covering only 70% of production costs due to heavy subsidies. Private investment could bridge the gap, but regulatory hurdles and monopolistic practices often scare off investors.
Renewables are central to this vision. Africa holds 60% of the world's best solar resources but contributes just 1% of global solar capacity. Countries like Rwanda and Namibia are pushing forward through partnerships such as the Accelerated Partnership for Renewables in Africa (APRA).
This initiative aims to triple renewable capacity by 2030. This isn't just about energy-it's about equity, opportunity, and survival. With demand for electricity expected to triple by 2040 due to industrialization and population growth, the stakes couldn't be higher.
The CMP could transform Africa into an energy leader or deepen existing divides if progress stalls. As negotiations continue, this project has become more than an engineering challenge.
It's a test of whether Africa can unite its vast potential into shared prosperity or remain a continent divided by its own ambitions.
It could also create one of the largest electricity markets on Earth and position Africa as a global energy powerhouse. But behind the promise lies a story of ambition, division, and daunting challenges.
The African Continental Master Plan (CMP ), adopted in 2021, envisions connecting five regional power pools-Maghreb, West Africa, Central Africa, East Africa, and Southern Africa-into a seamless grid by 2040.
For nations like Kenya, Ethiopia, and Ghana, this plan represents hope for economic growth and energy independence. Ethiopia and Kenya have already built a $1.26 billion high-voltage electricity highway to exchange renewable energy.
West African countries like Ghana and Senegal are also moving forward under the West African Power Pool (WAPP), with $55 million in World Bank backing to synchronize their grids.
But not everyone is on board. South Africa and Nigeria-the continent's two largest economies-are hesitant. South Africa's aging infrastructure and rolling blackouts have left it focused on fixing its domestic grid before looking outward.
Africa's Energy Challenges
Nigeria faces a different crisis: only 60% of its electricity is used due to inefficiencies and non-payment issues plaguing its power sector. Smaller nations like Chad and Malawi question whether they will see meaningful benefits from integration when their electricity consumption remains so low.
The challenges go beyond national politics. Africa's power grids lose up to 29% of transmitted electricity due to inefficiencies-nearly double the global average.
Public utilities operate at a loss in many countries, covering only 70% of production costs due to heavy subsidies. Private investment could bridge the gap, but regulatory hurdles and monopolistic practices often scare off investors.
Renewables are central to this vision. Africa holds 60% of the world's best solar resources but contributes just 1% of global solar capacity. Countries like Rwanda and Namibia are pushing forward through partnerships such as the Accelerated Partnership for Renewables in Africa (APRA).
This initiative aims to triple renewable capacity by 2030. This isn't just about energy-it's about equity, opportunity, and survival. With demand for electricity expected to triple by 2040 due to industrialization and population growth, the stakes couldn't be higher.
The CMP could transform Africa into an energy leader or deepen existing divides if progress stalls. As negotiations continue, this project has become more than an engineering challenge.
It's a test of whether Africa can unite its vast potential into shared prosperity or remain a continent divided by its own ambitions.
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