Mali: Akuo Energy Commissions 50 MWp Kita Solar Power Plant

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French independent power producer (IPP), Akuo Energy has commissioned its Kita solar photovoltaic power plant in the Republic of Mali.

With a capacity of 50 MWp, it is one of the largest photovoltaic installations in West Africa.

This project was implemented in partnership with Pash Global, an investor active in the renewable energy sector.
The independent power producer (IPP) now supplies 50 MWp to Mali’s national electricity grid.

The electricity produced is sold to the public company Electricité du Mali (EDM) under a 30-year power purchase agreement (PPA).

The solar power plant, which occupies a 100-hectare site, is made up of 187,000 panels and solar inverters capable of delivering 50 MWp, making it one of the largest solar parks in the West African sub-region.

Its power is capable of supplying up to 120,000 Malian households.

The installation is therefore an important part of Mali’s electrification process, which has been greatly delayed due to political and security instability, with more than 49% of the population still without access to electricity, according to the World Bank’s 2018 report.

Akuo Energy built the Kita solar power plant in partnership with the investment company Pash Global, which owns 49.9% of Akuo Kita Solar (AKS), the special purpose company created to operate the plant.

In addition to its energy contribution, the solar farm contributes to Mali’s sustainable development, as it will help avoid the emission of 52,000 tonnes of CO2 per year.

“This large-scale project thus strengthens the country (Mali), a signatory of the 1995 Kyoto Protocol, in its commitment to fighting climate change and enables it to get closer to its national renewable energy objectives by 2030. Furthermore, the plant contributes to reducing the country’s dependence on hydropower, which is currently under threat from climate change, but also on imported fossil fuels and the use of wood fuel from natural inland forests,” Akuo Energy points out.

The implementation of this clean energy project required an investment of 53 billion CFA francs (80.7 million euros). Its financing gave rise to an unprecedented mobilisation of development partners.

These include the West African Development Bank (BOAD) and Emerging Africa Infrastructure Fund (EAIF), managed by Investec Asset Management. The Netherlands Development Finance Corporation (FMO), the National Agricultural Development Bank of Mali (BNDA), Green Africa Power (GAP) and GuarantCo are also supporting this project, which also has a social component.