power

 

 

africa’s power story


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   CATEGORY: Power                                                                                      ……………    SUB-CATEGORY: Africa’s Power Story

 


Only 30% of the population

is connected

to the grid

2009

657 million Africans

relied on traditional biomass

as their source of energy

Africa spends about

USD 10 bn/yr

on the power sector

An investment of

USD 40.6 bn/year

is required

The current genertion capacity

of Sub-Saharan Africa

is in the region of 68 GW.

2/3rds in South Africa

5% of global primary energy

use 15% of the world’s population,

per capita energy consumption

in Africa is only 1/3 of global average

Nearly half of the current energy use

is traditional biomass

In 2009,

657 million Africans

relied on traditional biomass

and 587 million people

lacked access to electricity

Limited + unrealiable

energy access is a

major impediment

for economic growth

Avg electrification rate = 30%

70% = urban areas

12% = rural areas

This will rise to

34% in 2020

  • Only 30% of the population is connected to the grid (vs. 73% for developing countries) – in some countries (Uganda, Malawi, Rwanda), electrification rate is less 5%
  • In 2009, 657 million Africans relied on tradiional biomass as their source of energy, representing nearly half of the continent’s current energy use
  • Africa spends about USD 10 bn per year on the power sector (USD 2.27 bn for grid extension, USD 4.59 bn for grid supply, USD 1.37 bn for off-grid renewable electricity, USD 1,07 bn for policy/regulation and USD 0.76 bn for efficient use of electricity)
  • An investment of USD 40.6 bn per year is required – USD 26.6 bn in capital expenditure and USD 14 bn in operation and maintenance
  • The current generation capacity of sub-Saharan Africa is in the region of 80 GW, of which over half is in South Africa (These figures accord with Anton Eberhard)
  • With 5% of global primary energy use and 15% of the world’s population, per capita energy consumption in Africa is only a third of the global average.  NEarly half of the current energy use is traditional biomass
  • In 2009, 657 million Africans relied on traditional biomass and 587 million people lacked access to electricity
  • Limited and unrealiable energy access is a major impediment for economic growth.  In the coming decades, the energy mix will have to change to modern fuels, the per capita energy use will increase and the population will grow much faster than the global average.  Together, these three factors will put tremendous pressure on future African energy supply
  • While electrification programmes have improved access in some countries, many rural populations remain deprived of electricity.  The average electrification rate is 30%: 70% in urban areas and 12% in rural areas.  In a business-as-usual case, it will rise to 34% in 2020