Negatu speaks during the meeting in Kigali. (T. Kisambira) The number of people involved in informal trade is growing, but most in the region don’t have access to proper transport means. This is one of the challenges highlighted during the last day of The Global African Investment Summit that closed on Tuesday in Kigali. It was noted that only one in four households in the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA) region has access to energy, and the majority of them live in rural areas. Experts said in order to overcome these challenges, the region should put in place creative financing mechanisms to boost infrastructure development. “We have had desire to increase the region’s power pool but the provision of power in COMESA, for instance, is very poor. Only one in four people in the region has access to energy and some of the countries tend to use sources like hydro-power, which makes it complicated especially when it comes to drought seasons. There is no unified grid access and many rural areas simply have no electricity at all,” said Edward George, head research at Ecobank. On the other hand, he said, “when you look at the existing corridors in the region, you can tell that they could unlock the potential in the near future.” “The long corridors like those running down the Nile valley along the East African coast, the Maputo development corridor, the proposed Khartoum-Morocco (corridor) across the Mediterranean sea, all could integrate the region,” he added....
Experts call for creative financing to boost infrastructure development
Posted on: September 8, 2016
Posted on: September 8, 2016