AfDB President Akinwumi Adesina with Rwanda's Foreign Minister
Louise Mushikiwabo, at the 35th Session of the NEPAD Heads of State and
Government Orientation Committee meeting in Kigali on July 16, 2016
The issue of Africa's
industrialization was the focus of the 35th Session of the NEPAD Heads of State
and Government Orientation Committee that met in Kigali, Rwanda, in the context
of the African Union Summit.
At the July 16, 2016 event, the
leaders deliberated on the importance of intensifying industrialization and
scaling up the continent's electrification programs. They urged the New
Partnership for Africa's Development to work with regional trading blocs to
achieve industrialization for sustainable development.
Representing Rwanda's President,
Foreign Minister Louise Mushikiwabo asked the delegates to consider
implementing partnerships aimed at reaching sustainable development. "Our
goal of sustainable development cannot be realized without industrializing
Africa. Our deliberations are important and should lead to practical outcomes
geared towards achieving an industrialized Africa," she added.
The Committee's Chairperson,
Senegal's President, Macky Sall, stressed that "without energy there is no
industrialization". He said there was urgent need for an appropriate
industrialization strategy that will ensure a steady pace across the continent.
Addressing the meeting, President
Akinwumi Adesina of the African Development Bank, outlined the Bank's New Deal
on Energy for Africa whose goal includes expanding grid-power by 160 Gigawatts,
connecting 130 million people to grid, another 75 million people to off-grid
sources, and 150 million households to clean cooking energy. "We must have
energy for light, clean cooking and baseload energy," he said, emphasizing
the need to ensure the right energy mix on the continent.
He noted the importance of having
a timeline that allows Africa to make adjustments to its energy mix, citing the
AfDB-led Africa Renewable Energy Initiative, which is expected to deliver 10 GW
of new and additional renewable energy generation capacity by 2020. It also
seeks to mobilize Africa's potential to generate at least 300 GW by 2030.
The meeting pointed out the
critical role of private sector, describing it as effective in achieving rapid
industrialization. "We need to accelerate the rate of private sector
participation by creating an enabling environment for its operation. Private
sector is the engine of industrial growth, and its ability to create employment
is acknowledged," noted Hailemariam Desalegn, Ethiopia's Prime Minister.
He referred to the much anticipated Hawassa Industrial Park which is expected
to create 60,000 jobs in the country.
President Adesina pointed out the
opportunity posed by agro-allied industrialization, saying Africa needed to
diversify from raw material production to developing value chains. "This
will make Africa's agriculture competitive. He mentioned the current scenario
where Africa is producing close to 75 percent of the world's cocoa, but
processing only two percent. "The key is to use agriculture as a sector
for wealth generation and not one to fight poverty," he stated.
Monitoring and implementation of
these initiatives and projects emerged as a key point during the meeting. The
NEPAD Agency Chief Executive Officer, Ibrahim Assane Mayaki, presented a
recently developed 'dashboard', which he said would guide the Agency as well as
Member States in tracking and implementing targets of regional and continental
projects. The tool, he said, would enhance accountability.
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