BYSAMUEL
NABWIISO
In line with
its High 5 development
priorities and, in particular, its agenda to Light up and power
Africa, the African Development Bank plans to reach 29.3 million
people in African with electricity by 2020.
The President of the
Bank, Akinwumi Adesina, made this disclosure at the High Level Event on “New
Way of Working: From Vision to Action-National, Regional and Global Dimensions”
at the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia,
.
“The
African Development Bank is today at the forefront of investing in renewable
energy in Africa. The share of renewable energy in the Bank’s energy portfolio
increased from 14% when I became President in 2015 to 100% last year,”
President Adesina said. “Our support last year alone provided 3.8 million
Africans with access to electricity. And, with adequate financing, we expect to
reach 29.3 million people with access to electricity between 2018 and 2020.”He
explained
Some of the participants during the conference |
The
Bank President called on the UN Secretary General to join him in supporting the
Green Climate Fund and the Global Environment Facility to also work
differently, and step up support to co-pay for climate risk insurance for
vulnerable African countries, noting that African countries, hit by climate
change, are hard pressed to find funds to pay the insurance premiums.
The
Bank has stepped up and will support African countries to pay for insuring
themselves against catastrophic weather events that displace their public
expenditures. It plans to provide US $76 million in 2018 for the payment of
insurance premiums, with participating countries providing US $31.5 million and
the African Risk Capacity Agency (ARC) providing US $16 million. Latest figures
indicate that over 20 countries have indicated interest in participating in the
Bank-supported initiative.
“An
understanding of the link between environmental degradation, extreme poverty
and youth unemployment is critical to a New Way of Working. Wherever these
three elements are present, there is a ‘Triangle of Disaster’, in which
unemployment, poverty and environmental degradation chase each other in a
downward spiral to dereliction, terrorism, violence and conflict,” Adesina
said.
“The African
Development Bank brings this understanding to bear in its policies and programs.
Africa’s Triangles of Disaster must become ‘Triangles of Prosperity,’” replete
with “jobs, wealth and environmental resilience. That is why we strongly
welcome the New Way of Working initiative.”
The
Bank has also committed to triple its climate financing to 40% of new approvals
by 2020, and is deploying programs and actions to combat fragility and
strengthen resilience.
This,
the President explained, includes the Sahel region with a US $261-million
program; the Horn of Africa with a $281.6-million program; and, for Lake Chad,
now seriously affected by the degradation of its productive ecosystems, a US
$101-million program to restore the productivity of the basin ecosystem.
The
Desert to Power initiative spearheaded by the Bank aims to turn Africa’s
deserts into new sources of energy, by working with partners to develop 10,000
MW of solar power systems across the Sahel. The initiative is expected to
provide electricity to 250 million people, with 90 million of these provided
through off-grid systems.
“We
have already started with development of a 50 MW solar power system in Burkina
Faso,” Adesina said. “The initiative will protect the Great Green Wall of trees
established to protect against desertification in the Sahelian zone, from being
cut down by energy-poor households for use as fuel wood. When completed, we
expect this to be the largest solar power system zone in the world.”
Last
year, the Bank approved a special framework program called “Say No to Famine”
worth US $1.14 billion. The Bank is taking a regional approach to addressing
fragility, consistent with its new structure, and is using its Transition
Support Facility to deliver development solutions to communities in conditions
of fragility.
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