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500,000 Ivorians to gain access to clean, affordable electricity

CategoryPress Releases
CountryCote d'Ivoire
TagsEnergy Access, Finance and Investment, Renewable Energy

The African Development Bank (AfDB) through its concessional financing window, the African Development Fund, will release $10.53 million to secure clean and affordable electricity access for approximately 500,000 citizens of rural Côte d’Ivoire.

The funds, to be disbursed to the Ivorian government, will be used to connect 739 rural localities to clean, affordable electricity as part of the government’s Electricity for All Program. “The funds comprise a $8.26m loan and a $ 2.27m grant.

“The project will have multiple economic impacts on the national economy at the financial and socio-economic levels. The reduction in energy expenditure, particularly for household lighting following connection to the electricity grid, will be a significant outcome,” said Marie-Laure Akin-Olugbade, the African Development Bank’s director general for West Africa.

The project will facilitate domestic electrical installations and connect about 71,660 households (15% of them managed by women) to the electricity grid. It will also electrify 7,168 business centres.

As part of logistical support to 100 womens’ groups operating in the project area, the procurement of environmentally friendly electrical manufacturing equipment, as required, will be made for their benefit. In addition, the project will facilitate internships for young girls and boys who have completed vocational training centres and schools in these localities, to facilitate their integration into the workplace.

The 739 beneficiary communities of the project are located in the western district of Montages, two northern districts – Savanes and Woroba, and Zanzan in the north-east.

The direct beneficiaries of the project will be the Ivorian government Côte d’Ivoire Energies, the Ivorian Electricity Company (CIE) and thousands of households that will be connected to the electricity grid. Vocational centres, schools, training centres, health centres, craft workshops and women’s professional groups will also benefit with electricity access for their activities.

An estimated 500,000 people living in the project’s impact area, according to a June 2022 estimate, will benefit indirectly from the project’s creation of improved essential social services.