Africa-Press – Zimbabwe. AFRICA’S cities are expanding at unprecedented speed.
By 2050, more than 1,2 billion Africans are expected to live in urban areas, placing enormous pressure on housing, transport, health services — and waste management.
Today, African cities produce more than 125 million tonnes of municipal solid waste each year, much of it left untreated or ending up in open dumps.
What is often seen as an environmental liability, however, is increasingly being reframed as a source of energy, jobs, and economic growth.
The continent is witnessing the rise of waste-to-energy solutions, projects that not only address waste management but also generate electricity, heat, or fuels in the process.
For investors and policymakers alike, this emerging sector is becoming a crucial part of Africa’s circular economy and climate resilience strategies.
The pioneering Reppie waste-to-energy facility in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, remains one of the most emblematic examples.
Launched in 2018, it processes up to 1 400 tonnes of waste daily — about 80% of the city’s refuse — while generating 25 megawatts of electricity, enough to power 30% of the capital’s households.
Similar initiatives are now under way across the continent.
Kenya has proposed large-scale waste-to-energy plants in Nairobi and Mombasa, while Nigeria is exploring projects in Lagos and Abuja through public-private partnerships.
In South Africa, Cape Town and Johannesburg are piloting programmes to integrate landfill gas and biomass into the grid.
These examples illustrate a shift in mindset: waste is no longer just an urban problem but also a potential energy resource.
Beyond electricity generation, the waste-to-energy model carries strong economic benefits.
It reduces landfill costs, saves valuable urban land, and cuts methane emissions — a greenhouse gas far more potent than carbon dioxide.
At the same time, waste-to-energy projects have the capacity to create jobs across multiple stages of the value chain: collection, sorting, plant operation, maintenance, and by-product utilisation such as ash for construction materials.
For cities facing high unemployment, this dual benefit of cleaner environments and job creation makes waste-to-energy particularly appealing.
Moreover, shifting to waste-to-energy helps reduce reliance on imported fuels.
With many African countries spending significant foreign exchange on petroleum imports, substituting even a fraction of urban energy demand with domestically generated power from waste can ease pressure on balance of payments.
Africa is among the regions most vulnerable to climate change.
Integrating waste-to-energy into national energy systems supports Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) under the Paris Agreement by reducing methane and offsetting fossil fuels. The model also complements broader circular economy strategies, where recycling, re-use, and energy recovery work together to extend the life cycle of materials.
In this context, waste-to-energy is not an isolated fix but part of a wider sustainability toolbox — one that links urban planning, renewable energy, and environmental protection.
Despite its promise, the sector faces significant obstacles.
Financing remains the largest hurdle, with upfront capital costs for waste-to-energy plants often exceeding the budgets of local governments.
Technology transfer is another barrier, as advanced incineration and biogas systems require skilled technicians and reliable maintenance regimes.
There are also community acceptance issues. Misconceptions about emissions and health risks can slow project approvals.
Governments and operators will need to engage communities transparently and highlight the health benefits of reducing open burning and unmanaged dumps.
To scale up waste-to-energy, Africa will need to embrace innovative financing models.
Public-private partnerships, concessional loans from development banks, and green bonds are all instruments that can channel capital into the sector.
Aligning projects with climate finance facilities could also unlock concessional funding while strengthening Africa’s climate commitments.
For investors, the opportunity is clear: Africa’s waste-to-energy sector sits at the intersection of urbanisation, energy demand, and climate action. It is not just about generating electricity — it is about transforming how African cities grow.
Africa’s waste crisis is undeniable, but so too is its potential.
By turning urban waste into a source of power, jobs, and environmental gains, the continent can transform a mounting challenge into a sustainable growth engine.
The waste-to-energy revolution is not a distant prospect — it is already taking shape in cities from Addis Ababa to Lagos.
With the right investments and governance frameworks, Africa can lead the way in proving that yesterday’s trash can power tomorrow’s prosperity.
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