The Spark+ Africa Fund, which is an impact investment fund focused on financing the value chains of clean and modern cooking appliances and fuels to make them available to more people across sub-Saharan Africa, has raised more than $40-million in a first close. Clean cooking businesses face many challenges, including limited access to investment capital to increase their production and distribution capacity, high-risk perception and an insufficient return profile to attract commercial investment. Spark+ directly responds to these challenges and is a key component of development finance institution the African Development Bank’s (AfDB’s) actions in the area of clean cooking.
The first iteration of the updated National Infrastructure Plan 2050 (NIP 2050) points to a substantial finance gap of at least R2-trillion that will have to be closed if South Africa is to build the economic infrastructure required to deliver the growth and social objectives outlined in the National Development Plan (NDP). Gazetted last week by Public Works and Infrastructure Minister Patricia de Lille, the document focuses exclusively on energy, water, freight transport and digital communications infrastructure, with a second iteration to follow focusing on distributed infrastructure and related municipal services.
The City of Cape Town is nearing the production of electricity from landfill gas, also known as waste-to-energy. Although only a small amount of electricity will be produced at this stage, the successful implementation of this project is an important milestone in the journey towards overall sustainability, the city says.
A deregulated electricity sector is an “enormous opportunity” for South Africa, bringing the country more in line with international best practice and helping it tackle generating deficits, as well as building in resilience, reports investment bank Rand Merchant Bank (RMB).

However, for private electricity producers to gain momentum in the market requires innovative funding solutions to make this power accessible to the market.

Mineral Resources and Energy Deputy Minister Dr Nobuhle Nkabane has reaffirmed the government’s policy of building 2 500 MW of new nuclear energy capacity in the country, with the process starting in 2024. She was delivering the keynote address at the 2022 Nuclear Technology Imbizo (conference) on Wednesday. In her address, she particularly stressed the role of nuclear energy in achieving net-zero carbon emission energy generation, both locally and globally. “[W]e recognise that nuclear plays a pivotal role as one of the clean energy sources that are needed to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050,” she affirmed.
The Standard Bank Group has become the latest South African bank to confirm that it will no longer finance new coal-fired power plants or support the expansion of existing coal-fired power plants as part of its newly unveiled commitment to achieve net-zero carbon emissions from its portfolio of financed emissions by 2050. The group has also pledged, in a climate policy released by CEO Sim Tshabalala on March 16,  to achieving net zero carbon emissions from its own operations by 2040.
Kenya-based apparel manufacturer United Aryan has officially switched to using green power for manufacturing and inaugurated its new rooftop solar plant.

The 1.8 MW plant is the largest operational rooftop solar facility in East Africa.