China to drive Africa's renewable energy revolution
China has a unique opportunity to drive energy revolution in Africa if it can reverse nearly two decades of neglect of green power investments in the continent, research from Boston University showed on Tuesday.
Beijing has emerged as
the continent's biggest bilateral trading partner since the start of the
century and has financed billions of dollars worth of large-scale
infrastructure projects.
Although Africa's green
energy potential is one of the highest in the world, Chinese lending and
investment has so far provided relatively little support for the continent's
energy transition, according to a report from Boston University's Global
Development Policy Center and the African Economic Research Consortium.
Lending for renewables,
such as solar and wind, from China's two main development finance institutions
constituted just two per cent of their $52 billion of energy loans from 2000 to
2022, while more than 50 two per cent is allocated to fossil fuels.
"Given current economic
challenges and future energy opportunities, China can play a role in
contributing to Africa's energy access and transition through trade, finance
and FDI (foreign direct investment)," the report said.
Chinese development
finance institutions have been focused on investing in the extraction and
export of commodities to China and in electrification projects.
Chinese lending has
targeted many of the same sectors that produce the oil and minerals that flow
back to China.
At least eight hydropower
projects financed by the Export-Import Bank of China (CHEXIM), which represent
26 per cent of all hydropower lending, are intended to support the extraction
of various metals.
"Although this track
has led to export revenues for African economies, African countries are not yet
receiving the full benefits of renewable energy technologies," the report
said.
In 2022, fossil fuels
accounted for around 75 per cent of total electricity generation in Africa and
about 90 per cent of energy consumption, the report said.

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