DR Congo: Vandkraft skal sikre elektricitet til 9 mio. mennesker

Forfatter billede

Kæmpelandet DR Congo er ikke kun rig på metaller men også på vedvarende energi, hvor kun få procent af vandkraften er udnyttet. Nyt projekt skal sikre adgang til stabil elforsyning, skabe jobs og åbne op for handel med elektricitet med andre lande.

WASHINGTON, March 20, 2014 (World Bank): Sub-Saharan Africa is blessed with large hydropower resources that can bring electricity to homes, power businesses and industry, light clinics and schools, and spur economic activity, creating jobs and improving human well-being.

Yet, only 10 per cent of this hydropower potential has been mobilized, weakening the fight to end poverty and boost shared prosperity on the continent.

To combat this, the World Bank Group’s Board of Executive Directors on March 20th approved a 73,1 million US dollar grant to the DR Congo for the Inga 3 Basse Chute (BC) and Mid-size Hydropower Development Technical Assistance Project.

Kæmpe uforløst potentiale

DR Congo’s overall hydropower potential is estimated at 100 gigawatts (GW), the third largest in the world, behind China and Russia. Only 2.5 per cent has been developed.

With a 40 GW potential, Inga is the world’s largest hydropower site and its proper development can make it the African continent’s most cost-effective, renewable source of energy with an estimated generation cost of three US cent per kilowatt hour.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KSezdwI26NU#t=13]
Video: Baggrund og præsentation af projektet

Kun 1 ud 10 congolesere har adgang til elektricitet

The project presents a unified World Bank Group approach to support the Congolese government of DRC in developing under a public private partnership Inga 3-BC and mid-size hydropower project through a flexible government-led, transparent process. 

The project will create functional national institutions such as the Inga development agency to pilot the site development and award concessions on a competitive basis.

Transformative projects that expand people’s access to electricity are central to achieving the twin World Bank Group goals of ending extreme poverty and creating shared prosperity in Sub-Saharan Africa. 

The task of bringing electricity – through grid, mini-grid, and off-grid solutions – is urgent. With only one in three Africans having access to energy, and only one in 10 Congolese citizens having electricity, the challenge could not be greater.