Kenya: African Development Bank commits more than €101 million to boost access to electricity

The project will improve electricity access for households, social infrastructure and micro, small and medium enterprises

The Board of Directors of the African Development Bank Group on Wednesday approved a €101.10 million loan to Kenya to implement the third phase of the Last Mile Connectivity Project. The project will improve electricity access for households, social infrastructure and micro, small and medium enterprises.

The project will also benefit from a $13.17 million (€12.12 million) loan from the Canada-African Development Bank Climate Fund (CACF), administered by the Bank, providing long-term concessional loans for climate change adaptation and mitigation projects.

The Last Mile Connectivity Project – Phase III is one of the priority actions under the African Development Bank Group’s 2019-2023 Country Strategy Paper for Kenya.

“The Bank’s support will help households’ social infrastructure and local businesses’ access to adequate, reliable and affordable energy supply, and will create an enabling environment for the realization of Kenya’s Vision 2030,” said Nnenna Nwabufo, African Development Bank Group Director General for East Africa.

The project will create jobs and business opportunities and improve service delivery to the education and health sectors

Ms Nwabufo said the project will boost the government’s plans to provide every Kenyan with access to electricity.

The Last Mile Connectivity Project – Phase III builds on the successful implementation of the first two phases financed by the African Development Bank, which provided grid electricity for more than 1.05 million and nearly 1.6 million people, respectively.

The project entails strengthening the electricity network by constructing 13 substations of 33/11 kV, including the associated grid extensions and distribution network in 45 of the 47 administrative counties to connect a total of 139,480 households to the grid, meaning that some 543,972 Kenyans will gain access to electricity. In addition, 10,521 small and medium businesses and social facilities (23 educational institutions, 15 health establishments and eight water supply facilities) will be connected to the grid for the first time. This will reduce the use of pollutants such as fossil and biomass fuels, charcoal and unprocessed agricultural waste.   

The project will create jobs and business opportunities and improve service delivery to the education and health sectors. In the long term, the project will enhance the well-being and productivity of society, which will contribute to the socio-economic development promoted by Kenya’s Vision 2030.

It will also contribute to the transition to clean energy as households and businesses switch to clean and sustainable energy sources. The project will reduce greenhouse gas emissions by at least 3440 metric tonnes of carbon dioxide annually.

As of June 2022, 77% of the Kenyan population had access to grid electricity, higher than the estimated 50% average in Sub-Saharan Africa. The Government is targeting universal electricity access by 2030 at the latest.

Cover Environment Gas News Oil

The United States and its African partners join forces to promote clean cooking globally at the Clean Energy Ministerial (CEM16)

High-level leaders from the U.S., Saudi Arabia, South Korea, South Africa and the EU will convene in Busan next week to advance clean cooking solutions, with a focus on scaling LPG infrastructure and strengthening U.S.–Africa collaboration The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) is taking a leadership role at the upcoming Clean Energy Ministerial (CEM16) in […]

Read More
Cover News

The African Energy Chamber Inaugurates an Office in Shanghai to Intensify Sino-African Energy Cooperation

The Shanghai office will facilitate business opportunities between Chinese and African companies while fostering ties between governments The African Energy Chamber (AEC) (https://EnergyChamber.org) has officially opened an international office in Shanghai, China, aimed at strengthening cooperation between African governments and energy companies and their counterparts in China. The office – aligned with the AEC’s vision […]

Read More
Cote Ivoire Cover Electricity News Renewable energies Solar

National workshop of the consultative framework on autonomous solar pv technologies in Ivory Coast

ROGEAP supports 19 countries in West Africa and the Sahel to increase access to electricity for households, businesses and public institutions through modern off-grid solar systems National workshop of the consultative framework on autonomous solar pv technologies in Ivory Coast : the rogeap/ecowas project contributes to achieving the objectives for the development of a regional […]

Read More