A combination of high electricity tariffs, falling solar PV prices and a lack of reliability on the grid is spurring sales of on-site solar to business customers in sub-Saharan Africa.
This is the conclusion of a new report by research company BloombergNEF (BNEF), commissioned by responsAbility Investments, assessing the potential of commercial and industrial solar opportunities in the region.
We are excited to share “Solar for Businesses in Sub-Saharan Africa”, a new @BloombergNEF study commissioned by responsAbility Investments AG and co-written by Takehiro Kawahara and Ulimmeh-Hannibal Ezekiel (pictured, from right). Find the study here: http://ow.ly/AVC730nraFd
On-site solar power is cheaper than the electricity tariffs paid by commercial or industrial clients in 7 out of 15 markets in sub-Saharan Africa studied by BNEF. Read more: Increased solar power to boost Uganda’s electricity sector
“While the market is still small, it has great potential,” explained co-author Takehiro Kawahara, lead frontier power analyst at BNEF.
Kawahara added: “An immense energy deficit and crumbling infrastructure makes sub-Saharan Africa fertile ground for solar. As of November 2018, developers built a record number of 74MW serving business customers directly, offering them cheaper power than the grid. Kenya, Nigeria, and Ghana installed 15MW, 20MW, and 7MW respectively as of November 2018.”
Funding for C&I solar systems
According to the authors, the financial sector has yet to take on a major role in providing funding for C&I solar systems. So far, most business customers have bought systems for cash, without using third-party finance.
There are, however, big opportunities for specialised financiers in the region to do more.
The company expects solar to be increasingly deployed on C&I sites, where it often complements diesel power generation.
Antoine Prédour, head of energy debt at responsAbility, underlined: “Electricity outages are commonplace across most of sub-Saharan Africa. When the grid is out, customers must either shoulder high opportunity costs from lost sales or manufacturing output, or resort to much costlier backup power, usually from diesel. This is where financing solar installations can contribute to climate change mitigation by replacing fossil fuel.”
The report is available for download from here.