The Board of Directors of the African Development Bank (AfDB) has approved a Desert-to-Power (D2P) technical support programme that will advance the rollout of solar generation in G5 Sahel countries, where 60 million people lack access to electricity.
The technical assistance, in the form of a US$5 million grant from the Sustainable Energy Fund for Africa (SEFA), has three main components: technical studies for the integration of variable renewable energy (primarily solar) in national grids; feasibility studies for solar hybridization of existing isolated grids; and capacity building to support Chad to integrate the first solar power project (Djermaya Solar PV IPP) in its national grid, a statement by AfDB said.
“This technical assistance programme responds directly to needs identified in the National Desert to Power Roadmaps of the G5 Sahel countries. It specifically addresses key bottlenecks for the large-scale deployment of solar projects, and will help prepare bankable projects for subsequent investments,” said Dr. Daniel Schroth, Acting Director for Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency at the African Development Bank.
The statement said the approval follows the fourth Africa Energy Market Place (AEMP) event held by the Bank.
It said the 8-10 December 2020 event focused on the G5 Sahel countries and successfully mobilised a broad coalition of technical and financial partners to support the initiative. The G5 countries are Burkina Faso, Chad, Mauritania, Mali and Niger.
The Desert-to-Power initiative intends to turn the Sahel region into a renewable powerhouse, harnessing its solar potential to create the world’s largest solar zone. Aimed to increase solar generation capacity by 10 GW through on and off-grid projects, Desert-to-Power is expected to transform the livelihood of some 250 million people across the 11-state Sahel region.
AfDB said these activities are expected to address various challenges hampering the development of the energy sector in the G5 Sahel countries, including the lack of sufficient installed generation capacity, high reliance on imported fossil fuels and the inability of national grids to absorb larger amounts of variable renewable energy.
SEFA, managed by AfDB, is a special fund providing catalytic finance for renewable energy to boost universal access to affordable, reliable, sustainable, and modern energy services for all in Africa, in line with the Bank’s New Deal on Energy for Africa and Sustainable Development Goal 7.
The Fund was established in 2011 in partnership with the Government of Denmark and counts the United States, United Kingdom, Italy, Norway, Spain, Sweden, Germany and the Nordic Development Fund among its donors.