Close Menu
Xsum NewsXsum News

    Stay Updated.

    Get the latest Africa-focused business & infrastructure news and more directly to your inbox.

    What's Hot

    Mining Review Africa launches French and Portuguese versions to bridge regional digital divide

    Building South Africa’s next chapter through sustainable infrastructure

    Southern Africa Eco-Infrastructure Summit 2026 accelerates sustainable infrastructure and green real estate investment across the southern region

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Mining Review Africa launches French and Portuguese versions to bridge regional digital divide
    • Building South Africa’s next chapter through sustainable infrastructure
    • Southern Africa Eco-Infrastructure Summit 2026 accelerates sustainable infrastructure and green real estate investment across the southern region
    • Sustainable infrastructure strengthens South Africa’s future
    • Initial 11 rail operators selected for 41 routes as South Africa takes major step in opening up freight rail to private sector
    • Risk mitigation focused as SA opens rail and port networks to private participants
    • AIHS partners with Federal Department of Housing and Urban Development at 18th Housing Show
    • AIHS mourns Raila Odinga and celebrates his work in affordable housing and urban development
    X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn TikTok
    Xsum NewsXsum News
    • African Development Bank
    • Africa Finance Corporation
    • All Africa – Construction & Infrastructure
    • Africa Intelligence
    • Construct Africa
    • More
      • Mining Review Africa
      • Energy Capital Power
      • Sustainability & Climate-Resilient Infrastructure
      • Private-Sector Infrastructure Players
      • Urban Development & Housing
    Xsum NewsXsum News
    You are at:Home»African Development Bank»Rockefeller and Global Energy Alliance surpass $100 million to promote electrification in Africa
    African Development Bank

    Rockefeller and Global Energy Alliance surpass $100 million to promote electrification in Africa

    Xsum NewsBy Xsum NewsMarch 22, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read2 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

    The Rockefeller Foundation and the Global Energy Alliance for People and Planet have surpassed the $100 million threshold in funding for Mission 300, the World Bank and African Development Bank’s flagship effort to power 300 million Africans by the end of the decade, more than a tenfold increase from the initial $10 million commitment made just 19 months ago.

    The announcement, made at the Powering Africa Summit in Washington, underscores the growing philanthropic focus on electricity access as the most direct means of reducing poverty across sub-Saharan Africa, where 85 percent of the world’s estimated 730 million people live without electricity.

    Rockefeller President Rajiv Shah said during a fireside chat with U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright that the combination itself suggests that energy access is bipartisan political currency in the development world.

    Shah framed the effort in harsh terms. “The Rockefeller Foundation made the biggest bet in history on connecting people to electricity as the single best path out of mass poverty,” he said.

    The $100 million will be split approximately 47 percent from Rockefeller and his public charity, RF Catalytic Capital, and 53 percent from the Global Energy Alliance.

    The funding is now spread across 23 countries, including Nigeria, Ethiopia, Democratic Republic of Congo, Kenya and Mozambique.

    From pledge to pipeline

    Mission 300, launched by the World Bank and African Development Bank in April 2024, signed national energy agreements with 30 countries to define investment objectives and policy reforms. Since its launch, approximately 44 million people have been connected to electricity across Africa, and tens of millions more are expected to be connected by the end of 2026.

    Rockefeller and Allied capital is deployed across several workstreams. Much of it funds technical assistance to more than a dozen National Energy Compact Delivery Monitoring Units, the government agencies tasked with coordinating and tracking electrification progress, and to the 18 Mission 300 Fellowships embedded within those units.

    The initiative also expanded the Productive Use Loan program, co-managed with CLASP, which provides subsidies for clean, energy-efficient appliances for small businesses and farmers, and invested in Zafiri, Mission 300’s permanent capital fund, which provides patient equity for decentralized renewable energy programs.

    Clean cooking takes center stage

    A notable addition to the agenda is clean cooking, an area that has historically struggled to attract capital despite its huge impact on public health. In sub-Saharan Africa, 70% of households rely on charcoal and wood for cooking, and these fuels are linked to respiratory illnesses and deforestation. The alliance has launched the Clean Cooking Accelerator Initiative and is piloting a dedicated clean cooking delivery unit in Kenya as a potential continental model.

    For development finance veterans, $100 million is more important than a standalone number as a signal to commercial investors.

    Kevin Kariuki, vice president of the African Development Bank, said the philanthropic capital was explicitly aimed at de-risking investments and “mobilizing greater public and private capital flows”.

    The initiative is already channeling funding through the World Bank’s DARES program in West and Central Africa and the African Development Bank’s Africa Sustainable Energy Fund.

    Woo-chung Um, CEO of the Global Energy Alliance, emphasized the focus on sustainable economic benefits. “New electricity connections lead to lasting economic opportunities for people and communities,” he said, pointing to productive use programs as a mechanism to turn infrastructure into income.

    According to the Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative, access to electricity is the single strongest predictor of whether a household will escape extreme poverty, and is a data point that both the World Bank and its philanthropic partners have relied heavily on to build the political case for Mission 300’s ambitious 2030 goals.

    Africa Alliance electrification Energy Global million promote Rockefeller surpass
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email
    Previous Article‘I’m not thinking of leaving’: The need to keep sending money to family is a trap for African migrants in the Gulf | International
    Next Article South Africa’s industries are shrinking for the ninth year in a row – Daily Investor
    Xsum News
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Mining Review Africa launches French and Portuguese versions to bridge regional digital divide

    April 17, 2026

    Southern Africa Eco-Infrastructure Summit 2026 accelerates sustainable infrastructure and green real estate investment across the southern region

    April 14, 2026

    Initial 11 rail operators selected for 41 routes as South Africa takes major step in opening up freight rail to private sector

    April 9, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    African Development Bank Group and Nedbank Group sign multi-billion rand funding partnership to transform housing access and boost African trade

    December 19, 202529 Views

    A United Continent on the Move: Ambassador Kouyateh’s Call for an African Logistics Renaissance

    November 20, 202529 Views

    Eni secures multi-million dollar loan for African FLNG project

    January 26, 202622 Views

    African Development Fund and WHO collaborate to save Sudan’s health system

    November 17, 202522 Views
    Don't Miss
    Mining Review Africa April 17, 2026

    Mining Review Africa launches French and Portuguese versions to bridge regional digital divide

    670 VUKA Group’s flagship publication, Mining Review Africa, this week launched a French and Portuguese…

    Building South Africa’s next chapter through sustainable infrastructure

    Southern Africa Eco-Infrastructure Summit 2026 accelerates sustainable infrastructure and green real estate investment across the southern region

    Sustainable infrastructure strengthens South Africa’s future

    Stay In Touch
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • LinkedIn
    • TikTok

    Stay Updated.

    Get the latest Africa-focused business & infrastructure news and more directly to your inbox.

    About Us
    About Us

    Xsum News is Africa’s digital window into the future of business. We tell stories of innovation, enterprise, and investment that are shaping the continent’s economic rise. African Business, Added Up.

    X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn TikTok
    Our Picks

    Mining Review Africa launches French and Portuguese versions to bridge regional digital divide

    Building South Africa’s next chapter through sustainable infrastructure

    Southern Africa Eco-Infrastructure Summit 2026 accelerates sustainable infrastructure and green real estate investment across the southern region

    Most Popular

    African Development Bank praises Algeria’s development model, aims to replicate its success across the continent

    Considering the redefinition of African capital by UBA and Arauba

    G20 Energy Investment Forum brings together Africa’s top finance, insurance and technology leaders

    © 2026 Xsum News. All Rights Reserved.
    • 🌍 About Xsum News
    • 📬 Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Disclaimer

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.