This was possible thanks to the mobilization of $1 billion in private capital leveraged by guarantees from the World Bank and the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA), as well as equity participation from the International Finance Corporation (IFC), a member of the World Bank Group focused on the private sector. Other financing institutions including the African Development Bank have also joined forces.
Bringing Electricity to the People
The government of Cameroon has set an ambitious vision to expand access to electricity, increase the use of renewable energy, boost power generation, and strengthen transmission capacity to meet a surge in demand, projected to quadruple by 2035. Central to this vision is the completion of the Nachtigal Hydropower Plant, a transformative project driving the country’s energy future. Recent milestones include the completion of the Nyom II substation, and the first phase of associated transmission lines needed to evacuate energy from Nachtigal. These developments have significantly improved energy absorption for households and industries connected to the Southern Interconnected Network.
Batchenga’s medical center is just one example of the growing reach of electrification efforts. More than 140,000 households in the rural areas of the Center region have gained access to reliable electricity over the past year. These connections are achieved through grid extension, mini-grids, and off-grids solutions via the Rural Electricity Access Project for Underserved Regions, and solar photovoltaic (PV) installations that replace diesel-based thermal generation.
Renewable Energy to Reduce Carbon Emissions and Costs
Cameroon is embracing renewable energy to lower costs and cut carbon emissions. The grid is increasingly substituting diesel-based regional grids and off-grid generation and kerosene lighting, which emit black carbon—a major contributor to climate change.
The country is striving to green its electricity generation mix by advancing solar PV development, with the target of 250MW installed capacity. Expansions are underway at existing solar plants in Maroua and Guider. Innovative solutions, such as modular, pre-assembled solar PV power containers with battery storage, will further support the growing electricity demand with cost-effective, reliable, and renewable energy.
From the bustling medical center of Batchenga to the ambitious hydropower project of Nachtigal, Cameroon is joining the Mission 300 movement, which aims to connect 300 million Africans to electricity by 2030. Each step—whether extending the grid to rural communities or cutting carbon emissions through renewable energy—moves the nation closer to a brighter, more sustainable future.