
Ain Beni Mathar Integrated Combined Cycle Thermo-Solar Power Plant Dana Smillie World Bank
Energy-sector bottlenecks and power shortages cost Africa 2-4 per cent of GDP annually, and thereby undermining sustainable economic growth, job creation and investment. Energy deficits reinforce poverty, especially for women and people in rural areas (World Economic Forum). Chronic under-supply of secure and affordable electricity is a barrier to growth, food security, job creation and poverty reduction. It limits Africa’s prospects for industrialization and mechanization of productive sectors including agricultural value chains. Africa consumes only 3.1% of the world’s energy output. Subregionally, southern Africa consumes 45% of the continent’s energy and Northern Africa uses around 40%. According to the Africa Energy Outlook 2020, close to 770 million people, majority of them in sub-Saharan Africa, lack access to electricity, despite a recent decline in this figure resulting from increased grid connections and a rapid rise in the deployment of off-grid systems (IEA).
The Promise of African Voluntary Carbon Markets - A StoryMap
Understanding Africa’s Global Air Pollutant Emissions and Contributing Economic Sectors
Exploring the Role of Green Hydrogen in Africa’s Energy Mix
Secretary-General's Reports
- New Partnership for Africa’s Development: Consolidated progress report on implementation and international support
- Promotion of durable peace and sustainable development in Africa
- Biennial report on the review of the implementation of commitments made towards Africa’s development
- 麻豆APP system support to Agenda 2063: The Africa we want


