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objective of this study is to identify means of associating the private
sector to finance rural electrification projects in Sub-Saharan Africa
and other ACP countries.
A number of barriers and impediments to increased private participation
in rural power supply have been identified, including unclear or untried
legal frameworks, institutional inertia in utilities and among authorities,
lack of apprehension of opportunities, scarcity of local entrepreneurs,
unwillingness of local financing institutions to go into the sector, mismatch
of external capital flows and local project sizes, lack of links between
entrepreneurs and financiers, lack of technical capacity, etc. While the
obvious underlying barrier is poverty and lack of development, overcoming
the others could substantially assist in reducing the latter.
The countries have been rated regarding capacity, contract risk rating,
liberalisation, private sector performance, security and political stability
and market volume. Based on these ratings they have been classified into
three categories.
Category A includes countries with a genuine scope for private financing
of rural electrification. The prospects for success should be good, and
need for support to create the conducive conditions transient only.
The B category includes a number of countries with a good scope for specific
niche markets (e.g. small hydro, biomass, cogeneration), but lacking in
several aspects of market formation.
The countries in category C contend with several structural and economic
problems and have only limited prospects for private participation in
rural electrification.
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