The United States Agency for
International Development (USAID) has announced that more than
600,000 people would
have access to affordable power and the
internet under the U.S. Power Africa Initiative.
USAID’s Administrator, Mr Mark Green,
who disclosed this at the ongoing Fourth Annual Powering Africa
Summit in Washington DC, said that the Power Africa project had so
far benefited many African communities.
“Power Africa is helping our private
sector partners to set up micro-grids, which will bring reliable and
affordable power to these camps for the first time.
“Once the camps are electrified,
USAID’s innovation team and other coalition members will work to
connect them to the Internet.
“We are creating digital tools that
tap into residents’ mobile phones to track health records, to
provide digital identities, and to enable pay-as-you-go power, school
fees, and other digital vouchers for services.
“In total, we expect to give more
than 600,000 people access to affordable power, internet, and these
digital tools,’’ he said.
According to him, Power Africa has so
far helped 58 million people across Africa to gain access to
electricity using market forces and enterprise principles.
Green said that to make Power Africa a
success, the agency was releasing the Administration’s strategy for
Power Africa 2.0.
The USAID Administrator said that the
new strategy would ensure that Power Africa could continue to bring
innovative ideas and enterprise-driven approaches to bear to help
meet Africa’s power
needs.
“Under Power Africa 2.0, we will be
expanding beyond our previous targets of increased energy generation
and access and looking to make gains in the areas of distribution and
transmission.
“And perhaps most importantly, we
will be taking on the enabling environments that allow private
enterprise to grow and thoroughly flourish,’’ he said.
Power Africa is a U.S. Government
initiative that addresses one of the most pressing challenges to
sustainable economic growth and development in sub-Saharan Africa —
access to electrical power.
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