The Power of Africa: A picture is worth a thousand watts
Two years ago, President Obama launched Power Africa: a private sector-led initiative aimed at doubling access to electricity across sub-Saharan Africa. Two out of three Africans— more than 600 million people — lack access to electricity. Power Africa brings together the world’s leaders in energy, commercial lending, innovation, and trade to provide opportunity and economic growth.
In June, the World Economic Forum in Africa brought many of those same key partners together and forced us to ask each other a very important question. What does the impact look like? Is the difference we’re making significant and sustainable?
Since its launch, Power Africa has evolved from a U.S. government initiative into an effort that now involves a host of multilateral organizations and more than 100 private sector partners. That’s why, in August of 2014, President Obama expanded Power Africa’s reach to all of sub-Saharan Africa and tripled the original goals, setting objectives to add 30,000 MW of new and cleaner power generation and grant access to electricity for at least 60 million new households and businesses.
This summer, President Obama returns to the continent where he’ll find that Power Africa’s impact is being felt. Our teams are on the ground throughout the continent, working every day with citizens and entrepreneurs, private sector businesses from around the world, the global public sector, and our government counterparts in African nations, to advance Africa’s energy sector. We see real change — sometimes small discrete steps, sometimes large and obvious — showing us that the cumulative work of so many is building toward something powerful.
We know that Power Africa is changing people’s lives, businesses, and governments, but a signed deal or a new megawatt are not always easy to visualize. That’s why in celebration of our two year anniversary, we are showing the world what “Power Africa” looks like. With the creativity and vision of our partners, we’ve been able to shed light on innovation increasing access to power in Africa. This month we announced the eight winning photos of the Power Africa photo contest.
We asked our partners, our colleagues, and our implementers to answer a simple question with their photos: what does energy innovation look like?
Gigawatt Global: Gigawatt Project Rwanda
d.light: Impact through energy innovation
Little Sun Solar: Her first solar-powered light
Azuri PayGo Solar: Before with kerosene, after with Azuri PayGo Solar
SunFunder: SunFunder SolarNow Uganda
dVentus: A dVentus Engineer in the office conducting tests
Powerhive: Powerhive – driving local commerce and aiding economic development
Arizona State University: ASU-led VOCTEC program: Hands-on all-women training, Nairobi
The responses surprised us. More than sixty photographs showcase the diversity of our collective impact and reach. Access to electricity is more than just a signature on a dotted line when project developers close the financing for a project. It’s the face of a girl as she holds her first solar lamp, it’s the handshake of two people agreeing to do things differently, it’s a classroom of women taking over an entire sector led for generations by men, and it’s a solar field built in a village recovering from genocide.
Whether it’s through our Beyond the Grid solutions, our early-stage financing, our feasibility studies, or our support to overcome a policy issue, Power Africa is delivering diverse clean energy solutions and more importantly, opportunities for the future.
Over the next month, as much of the world’s focus turns to discuss the challenges facing Africa’s energy situation, we at Power Africa remain focused on the innovators that are changing and shaping Africa’s future one connection and watt at a time. The rest of the world should too.
That’s the real power of Africa, it’s the people, their vision, and their determination to be the power for a brighter tomorrow.
Author: Andrew M. Herscowitz is the coordinator for President Barack Obama’s Power Africa and Trade Africa initiatives, USAID.
Image: GIGAWATT Global solar field at the Agahozo Shalom Youth Village in Rwanda. Power Africa
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