Africa’s journey to net-zero: USD7 trillion just for energy

The green energy transition is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for African development, a chance to reduce poverty and lift growth potential. To reap this opportunity, there are three levers to pull: strengthening political stability and the rule of law, reducing project risks by adopting blended finance, and formulating clear green-energy strategies backed by economy-wide transition plans with sector-specific pathways. This paper aims at the last point, providing guidance for governments and investors alike. 

Limiting global warming to the Paris target of 1.5°C will require USD200bn of investments in the African energy system per year, by 2030, followed by USD370 billion per year, by 2050. In total, the investment opportunity adds up to just over USD7 trillion between 2020-2050. 

On that journey to net zero, two subsectors are pivotal. First, Africa’s electricity-production capacities will have to increase tenfold by 2050, requiring USD110 billion of investment per annum as early as 2030, which then would need to increase to USD190 billion in 2050 to meet the goal of limiting the global temperature increase to 1.5°C. Second, yearly investment needs in the African hydrogen market will have to reach USD 2-3 billion per year in 2030 and USD4-9 billion in 2050. African countries feature a promising combination of resources, coastal access and favorable location, positioning the continent as a potential central hub for the hydrogen-based global economy. Note that hydrogen investments in Nigeria are set to be significantly higher than in most other major African economies and will already reach USD2 billion in 2040. 

Related information

"Africa's journey to net-zero: USD7trn just for energy"
Please also check out the Sectoral Assessment of Multiple Emission Pathways, set up by Allianz Economic Research:

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