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Funding of $70 million pledged for Tanzanias geothermal plans

Funding of $70 million pledged for Tanzanias geothermal plans Dar es Salaam, Tanzania (source: flickr/ Ali Damji, creative commons)
Alexander Richter 12 Sep 2013

Tanzania receives funding of $70 million from the Climate Investment Fund and the African Development Bank for the development of more than 100 MW of geothermal power generation capacity.

Announced today, “the Republic of Tanzania received endorsement from the Climate Investment Funds (CIF) of an investment plan which will help the country to scale-up the development of its abundant renewable energy resources. The plan is designed to transform the country’s energy sector, shifting from its increasing dependence on fossil fuels and climate-sensitive hydro resources to a more diversified energy mix making use of the country’s abundant, reliable and cost efficient geothermal and solar resources.

The plan will be funded by US $50 million from the CIF’s Scaling-Up Renewable Energy Program in Low-Income Countries (SREP) and the balance from the African Development Bank (AfDB), World Bank, Government, private sector, commercial sources and other development partners. It features a geothermal development component and a renewable energy for rural electrification component.

The geothermal development component, which is expected to receive US $25 million from SREP and US $45 million support from the AfDB, will catalyze development of more than 100 MW of geothermal power, principally by the private sector, and will establish an enabling environment for large-scale geothermal development.

The renewable energy for rural electrification component will seek to: (i) build an efficient and responsive development infrastructure for renewable energy-based rural electrification and (ii) demonstrate its effectiveness by supporting a time-slice of private-sector investments in off-grid electricity enterprises.

The plan will be implemented through an integrated approach that includes:

  • investments in renewable energy technologies, particularly the infrastructure needed for electricity production and distribution;
  • stakeholders capacity building;
  • integration with dynamic Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs);
  • provision of adequate technical assistance and advisory services.

It is expected that SREP Tanzania will have a transformative impact on the country by supporting low carbon development pathways through reducing energy poverty and increasing energy security. By 2020, it is expected that per capita electricity use will increase from 78 to 350kWh, with annual electricity output from renewable energy increasing from 370 to 2,000 GWh/year once the geothermal plant becomes operational.

An additional $1.7 million was also approved in project preparation grants for the two components of the plan.”

Source: African Development Bank Group