MIGA backs use of solar to power cell towers in Sierra Leone and Liberia

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Sierra Leone Telegraph: 23 January 2021:

MIGA, a member of the World Bank Group, has issued guarantees of up to US$25.6 million to Escotel Mauritius covering its investments in solar power generation in Liberia and Sierra Leone for a period of up to ten years.

The MIGA guarantees provide protection to Escotel Mauritius against the risks of Transfer Restriction, Expropriation, and War and Civil Disturbance.

MIGA’s guarantees will support the provision of electricity and logistical services to power existing and future cell phone towers (Telecommunication Network Sites or TNS) in Liberia and Sierra Leone.

The Escotel projects will be providing power through considerably more efficient and climate-friendly power solutions by installing photovoltaic solar panels at each TNS that will either supplement or replace entirely the diesel generators.

This will allow the telecommunication operator to modernize and expand the scope and quality of its services and will have a significant impact since providing power to TNS currently represents about 50 percent of the total operating costs due to unreliable supply and heavy reliance on expensive diesel generators.

Of the US$25.6 million in guarantees, US$13.5 million is for Escotel (SL) Limited in Sierra Leone, and US$12.06 million is for Escotel Liberia Inc.

“MIGA’s clean energy guarantees to Escotel Mauritius will contribute positively to GHG reductions in Liberia and Sierra Leone,” said MIGA Executive Vice President Hiroshi Matano. “The cost savings through a more energy- and cost-efficient supply of clean power also send a strong signal to other telecom providers in Africa.”

MIGA’s support for these projects will yield significant climate mitigation benefits. It is expected that 600 TNS will be modernized by 2028 in Sierra Leone, resulting in an avoidance of more than 58,000 tons of CO2 equivalent (CO2e) emissions over the period. In Liberia, nearly 158,000 tons of CO2e emissions will be avoided by the modernization of 612 TNS over the same period.

Off grid and on grid power is very unreliable in both Sierra Leone and Liberia. In Sierra Leone, only 16 percent of the population has access to electricity; the electrification rate in the vast rural parts of the country is almost zero.

Liberia still faces significant challenges transitioning its power sector from post-conflict recovery to long-term development and has one of the lowest rates of electrification in the world. Only 12 percent of the 4.8 million Liberians, and less than 20 percent of residents in the capital, Monrovia, have access to electricity.

MIGA’s guarantees allowed us to raise capital and invest in a challenging market,” said Michel Hubert, CEO of Escotel Mauritius. “We are proud to help operators reduce reliance on fossil fuels, giving people better access to telecommunication services and supporting economic transformation, and are looking forward to implementing this model in other geographies.”

MIGA was created in 1988 as a member of the World Bank Group to promote foreign direct investment in emerging economies by helping mitigate the risks of restrictions on currency conversion and transfer, breach of contract by governments, expropriation, and war & civil disturbance; and offering credit enhancement to private investors and lenders.

Since its creation, MIGA has issued over US$59 billion in guarantees across 118 developing countries.

As part of the IDA19 replenishment, the World Bank Group is continuing the IDA Private Sector Window (PSW) created under IDA18 to catalyze private sector investment in the poorest and most fragile countries. Recognizing the key role of the private sector in achieving IDA’s objectives and the World Bank Group’s twin goals, the window provides a source of co-investment funding and guarantees to de-risk private investments supported by the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA) and the International Finance Corporation (IFC).

The IDA PSW is an option when there is no commercial solution and the World Bank Group’s other tools and approaches are insufficient. For more information, visit: http://ida.worldbank.org/psw

1 Comment

  1. Why has it taken our two countries to recover from the civil wars that Charles Taylor’s NPLF Movement and our own deranged Foday Sankoh’s RUF rebel movements inflicted on us? Answer: lack of good leadership and forward thinking. Rwanda has recovered from the horrors of the 1994 genocide. Today under Paul Kegame, Rwanda is the shining example of a country that went to hell and back and has now recovered from such horrors of the civil war. It has taken advantage of the help they got from international goodwill to secure the future of its citizens. Solar energy played a great part in the recovery planning programme. It is cheaper, affordable and easy to maintain.

    It is environmentally friendly and reliable and since it relies on the sun as a means to covert it to energy use, we cannot say our two countries are short of sunshine. The problem here is we got two leaders in Bio and Weah who lack the leadership skills to come up with long term development goals. Bio should have stayed in the Army and be made a chief of staff, because that is what he is trained for, and it is the only trade he knows. His contribution to our country’s military preparedness would have been greatly enhanced. So when you hear stories, that the dictator in Guinea Alpha Conde, threatened our country with a strong Sierra Leone army would have given him food for thought. George Weah should have better served as the national football coach for Liberia. Let us stop this nonsense of electing people in position of power that decides the fate of millions of their country men and women, but are ill-prepared for the job to lead.

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