While the installed capacity of wind farms around Africa stood at 6.5MW in 2020, this represents only a tiny fraction of what is possible.
Citing a report from the International Finance Corporation, the Wind Energy: Joining Forces for An African Lift-Off policy brief concludes that just onshore, the potential in Africa is sufficient to satisfy the entire continent’s electricity demand 250 times over.
The Africa-EU Energy Partnership Policy Brief Wind Energy: Joining Forces for An African Lift-Off explores the main action areas that could unlock Africa’s enormous wind energy potential. It says that by working together Africa and Europe could leverage their existing partnership and secure the wind sector’s contribution to Agenda 2063 as well as Agenda 2030.
The Policy Brief summarises existing data on the status of wind in Africa as well as its potential. It concludes that to secure an enabling environment for wind energy development, Africa and Europe must focus on five core tasks which include creating bankable power purchase agreements, enhancing grid infrastructure and providing continued capacity development.
Wind energy is critical to the sustainable future of both Africa and Europe
Johan van den Berg, AEEP Secretariat, points out in the policy brief executive summary that energy shows immense opportunities for expansion in Africa, as a key driver of economic development. Energy is critical to both Africa and Europe’s sustainable future, he emphasised.
Competitive cost and resource availability will make wind and solar PV power anchors for future on-grid power as they increase their share of the power mix. “Africa needs to dramatically expand generation capacity to approach full access to sustainable energy services for its citizens and fully pursue its sustainable master plan as stipulated in the AU Agenda 2063,” writes van den Bergh.
Working together Europe could contribute technology, capital, know-how and skills training to Africa’s young workforce while taking advantage of the abundant land, variable wind regime and deep electricity demand. While enabling environment needs attention and effort, the rate and sophistication of technology deployment are already sufficiently advanced.
“If all of the global new wind power installations in 2020 had taken place in Africa, and if the grid would have been ready to receive and distribute it, this new annual capacity alone would have sufficed to close the energy access in Africa within twelve months for the more than 600 million people needing it. This shows the immense potential of wind power while simultaneously underling the importance of immediate action on other enabling building blocks, like transmission and distribution systems.
“Africa now has a total of 6.468MW of wind-based, installed capacity, but this figure only represents a fraction of the continent’s technical wind potential,” said van den Bergh.

