Power-sector rules are getting ripped open as Zimbabwe bets private money and regional teamwork can drag electricity access to everyone by 2030.
Energy market liberalization push
Energy market liberalization push
- Vice President Dr. Constantino Chiwenga announced deeper sector liberalization in Victoria Falls.
- Chiwenga represented President Emmerson Mnangagwa at the SADC Sustainable Energy Week.
- The government plans to open generation to Independent Power Producers.
- Direct power purchase agreements and private grid participation are being enabled.
- Vice President Dr. Constantino Chiwenga tied reforms to universal access by 2030.
- Current electricity access sits near 62 percent nationwide.
- Rural communities have just above 20 percent coverage.
- Rural electrification will prioritize schools and clinics for full coverage.
- Vice President Dr Constantino Chiwenga said reforms aim to pull in private capital.
- Zimbabwe’s coal, hydro sites, solar, and wind are central to the pitch.
- Domestic financial institutions are being courted for structured funding.
- National Development Strategy 2 and the Energy Compact anchor the policy shift.
- Vice President Dr Constantino Chiwenga urged SADC to move beyond raw-material exports.
- He questioned whether Africa remains an extraction zone or builds value chains.
- Africa holds nearly 60 percent of the top renewable resources.
- Yet the continent still struggles with persistent power shortages.
- Vice President Dr. Constantino Chiwenga backed regional projects like Batoka Gorge and Inga Dam.
- Stronger interconnections are viewed as key to supply stability.
- Southern Africa faces an estimated US$83 billion annual infrastructure funding gap.
- Chiwenga pressed financiers and policymakers to align rules and scale capital.