Photo: cleantechnica.com
Office of the Spokesperson
Department of State
Washington, DC
August 7, 2014
Secretary of State John Kerry has announced that the U.S. Department
of State plans to commit an additional $10 million for the U.S.-Africa
Clean Energy Finance initiative (U.S.-ACEF), which is aimed at helping
Africans transition away from traditional sources of energy that
contribute to the global challenge of climate change.
Two out of three sub-Saharan Africans — nearly 600 million people —
lack access to electricity. That forces them to spend significant income
on costly and unhealthy forms of energy, such as diesel to run factory
generators and wood for smoky indoor fires for cooking.
Secretary Kerry announced the additional investment in U.S.-ACEF on
August 5 at a U.S.-Africa Business Summit, hosted by the U.S. Department
of Commerce and Bloomberg Philanthropies. It raised the total State
Department support for the program to $30 million.
The Business Summit coincided with the U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit,
which brought nearly 50 African heads of state to Washington for a range
of discussions focused on the Continent, its issues, and ways for the
United States to partner with the nations.
The Business Summit also included announcements of the latest
U.S.-ACEF projects –micro-lending for solar energy and access to fresh
water through the Participatory Microfinance Group for Africa program,
as well as a small hydroelectric project that will power Shyira Hospital
in Rwanda’s northern province.
U.S.-ACEF launched two years ago as an innovative partnership between
the State Department, the Overseas Private Investment Corporation
(OPIC), and the U.S. Trade and Development Agency (USTDA) to provide
early-stage development support for clean energy investment in
sub-Saharan Africa.
The initiative brings together USTDA’s project planning expertise
with OPIC’s financing and risk mitigation skills to encourage private
sector investment and increase support for U.S. businesses and exports
in sub-Saharan Africa’s clean energy sector. U.S.-ACEF support ensures
that technically and financially sound projects are implemented, rather
than falling short because of insufficient project preparation.
U.S.-ACEF has seen high demand, receiving more than 400 project
applications since its launch. While originally projected to last five
years, the initial $20 million investment is expected to be fully
deployed by the end of 2014.
Collectively, these projects are on track to unlock hundreds of
millions of private investment dollars that would not otherwise flow. A
small amount of support at the project preparation stage can leverage
significantly larger investments. For example, $400,000 in U.S.-ACEF
support enabled $19.4 million in private financing for Gigawatt Global’s
8.5 megawatt, grid-connected, solar power plant in Rwanda.
U.S.-ACEF projects have the potential to result in hundreds of megawatts in additional power generation capacity across Africa.
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