Insufficient capital is a key obstacle to expanding electricity access for the roughly 600 million people in Africa who currently live without it, according to a new IEA report that outlines essential tools to unlock greater investment and eliminate the access gap.
Access to electricity is a cornerstone for economic development, poverty reduction and social equity. However, almost 600 million people in Africa lack access to electricity today, with progress falling far behind targets set by both African governments and the international community. Reaching universal electricity access will require a rapid scale-up of investment and financing to USD 15 billion per year, enabling the expansion of generation capacity, grid networks and decentralised solutions while ensuring that progress remains inclusive and sustainable.
In a new flagship report, Financing Electricity Access in Africa, the International Energy Agency (IEA) undertakes its authoritative energy analysis to provide a comprehensive overview of the status quo of electricity access financing, including a first-of-a-kind tracking of public and private investment flows. Building on the analysis of the current landscape, this report offers deeper insights into how investment evolves to reach universal access – quantifying the scale of private and public financing required as well as the affordability challenges across the continent.
In sub-Saharan Africa’s sun-baked heartlands, 600 million people huddle in energy’s shadow, their dreams dimmed by unreliable power. But a bold quest ignites: by 2035, universal electricity beckons through the IEA’s ACCESS blueprint, craving $15 billion yearly – a sixfold leap – to weave grids, mini-grids, and solar homes into a luminous web.
The report finds that with progress on expanding electricity access in Africa stalling, $150 billion in investment is needed to deliver universal access within the next decade – or about $15 billion per year. According to new IEA tracking, less than $2.5 billion was committed for new electricity access connections in sub-Saharan Africa in 2023, the most recent year for which full data are available. While that is a quarter more than was committed in 2019, it still lags far behind what would be required to provide universal access by 2035.
The report finds that despite a challenging macroeconomic backdrop, mounting pressures on domestic budgets in African countries, and recent cuts to development aid, universal access to electricity across sub-Saharan Africa can be achieved within this timeframe with the right enabling conditions and strong action by governments, the private sector and development finance institutions. Based on fresh analysis, it outlines how this goal could be realised in practice, drawing on successful strategies that have helped close electricity access gaps in other regions.
More than 70% of the investment committed in 2023 came from international public finance, while the private sector contributed less than 30%. In a scenario that reaches universal access in sub-Saharan Africa by 2035, overall investment is much higher, and 45% of it would need to come from private investment. To achieve this, the report recommends a series of targeted regulatory changes, as well as incorporating electrification strategies into national planning and rural development programmes. This would help increase electricity demand and support sustainable economic development in rural areas, which in turn would help draw in private funding.
The report also lays out methods to drive a tenfold increase in equity financing for access projects, a crucial lever for quickly scaling up investment. In addition, it sees a strong role for grants – although it notes that improvements to results-based financing are needed to maximise their impact.
Concessional finance resources would account for about 40% of total investment over the next decade on a pathway to universal access by 2035. The report calls for adopting a strategic approach that focuses resources on areas that cannot be serviced by the private sector. These include low-income and vulnerable communities, the early stages of project or company development, and technical assistance and capacity building.
According to the report, financing currently skews towards urban areas, even though 80% of the population without electricity access lives in rural regions. It is also geographically concentrated, with half of finance flows channelled to only six countries. To tackle these discrepancies, it recommends the continued development of new and innovative financing mechanisms that can help direct investment towards decentralised energy solutions, such as mini-grids and solar home systems. Targeted financing approaches are also needed for communities living in informal settlements, fragile states and vulnerable humanitarian contexts, which account for a significant share of the population without access today.
The report also emphasises that beyond connecting households to electricity, additional finance of at least $2 billion per year is necessary to ensure that basic levels of energy service are affordable. IEA analysis shows that roughly 220 million people in Africa (or about 40% of those without access) are unlikely to be able to afford a “basic bundle” of services, based on today’s income and subsidy levels, while 400 million people would not be able to afford an “essential bundle”. To tackle this issue, concessional capital can be deployed to reduce financing costs and open the door for more private sector financing, while governments could consider deploying time-bound subsidies to consumers or developers.
Heroes face dragons: sparse funds ($2.5B in 2023, mostly urban-bound), crushing fees swallowing half a month’s wage, tariffs unaffordable for 40-65% of the poor, and rural wilds (80% unelectrified) laced with conflict, fragility, and women’s $42B financing chasm. Progress crawls at 16 million connections yearly, dwarfed by booming populations.
Yet beacons flare – Kenya’s fee-slaying projects connect millions; Zambia’s subsidies drop tariffs to pennies; PAYG solar booms to 5.5 million units. Blended finance, green bonds, and results-based payouts summon private gold (aiming 45% share), while grants target the forsaken: refugees in Ethiopian sun, islanders off Ghana.
The call to arms? Governments pledge $1.9B budgets; donors flood $6.2B concessional tides; innovators craft energy-as-a-service for the penniless. With G20/COP30 banners flying, productive sparks – like agro-powered mini-grids – double demand, de-risk debts, and close gaps for women and the wilds.
By 2035, darkness yields: villages hum with light, cities pulse with promise, and Africa’s untold stories blaze into empowered tomorrows.
/IEA, X/