Sub-Saharan Africa is drawing in more private power investors, alongside state-owned utilities, but the region still produces as much electricity as one European country, an expert said on Tuesday.
“There’s a power crisis that exists and that crisis is characterised by insufficient generation capacity,” Anton Eberhard of the University of Cape Town (UCT) said on the sidelines of a power conference.
“We have 68 gigawatts — that’s across the whole of sub-Saharan Africa — and that’s the same as one country: Spain.
“A lot of the capacity that is there is badly maintained so up to a quarter is not available. It’s also high cost and there is very low access.”
The power sector on the continent, where two out of three people live without electricity, is “a hybrid” of state and private companies.
“Increasingly we see the introduction of private sector participation in the form of IPPs [independent power producers],” Eberhard told delegates at Africa Power Colloquium.
“But in most cases the incumbent state owned utility is still a dominant market position and in many cases these utilities are building new capacity alongside IPPs.”
Reforms to tackle the crisis had seen the entry of private producers on the continent and state-owned utilities moving to unbundle services, introducing more cost-effective tariffs, and raising bonds to fund projects.
Challenges were pushing the state utilities to perform better, accelerating private investment and strengthening the performance of electricity regulators, he said.
The World Bank estimates an annual investment gap of $23-billion to build plants, networks and meet electrification targets, said Eberhard, who is based at the UCT graduate school of business. – AFP