GAMBIA -Akon Lighting Africa is a project started in 2014 by music artist Akon with Samba Bathily and Thione Niang which aims to provide electricity by solar energy in Africa.
According to Akon, he and Thione Niang grew up in Kaolack Region,
Senegal in a town without electricity. In 2013 both decided to help
drive Africa’s transformation.
The rapper added The Gambia and
Cape Verde to his Akon Lighting Africa initiative this weekend, a fund
that already helps populations who struggle to connect to limited or
absent national grids in 25 African countries.
The Gambian village
of Sareh Pateh, population 4,000, turned on solar street lights for the
first time on Sunday night, along with power for a mosque and a
pharmacy.
"I want to leave a legacy,. "Africans work harder in everything and they work
harder to live and to sustain themselves."
Akon, real name Aliaume
Damala Badara Akon Thiam, spent part of his childhood in a Senegalese
village without electricity before settling in the United States.
Best known for his singles "Locked Up" and "Smack That", Akon has
devoted more of his time in recent years to attending renewable energy
conferences and visiting schools to provide adequate lighting to study.
In
Cape Verde on Saturday the musician met with Economy Minister Jose
Goncalves and said he considered the poor but stable island nation to be
his next investment prospect.
He has identified investment
opportunities and hopes to launch a mini-grid solar project when
possible, he told journalists in the capital, Praia. The
musician's visit comes alongside a wider push for solar power on the
continent. Several African nations held a renewable energy summit in
Guinea on Saturday to raise funds for 19 projects.
The African
Renewable Energy Initiative, launched at the Paris COP21 summit in 2015,
aims to bring large-scale projects to the continent. Consumers
are increasingly opting for their own off-grid solar solutions like
Akon's to power homes and small businesses, alongside larger but costly
government investments.
According to International Energy Agency
projections, almost one billion people in sub-Saharan Africa will gain
access to the grid by 2040, but by that time 530 million will remain
off-grid, almost comparable with the 600 million who cannot access power
today.
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