
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. Their initial technique is to install solar street lights and small energy systems. . According to (Aliaune Thiam, born in Missouri), he and Thione Niang grew up in , , in a town without electricity. In 2013 both decided to help drive Africa’s. . The group announced the launch of the solar academy in , at the second Sustainable Energy for All Forum, in . Solar Academy will teach. . • . Since launching in 2014, Akon's group has operations in 14 nations, including , , , , and . . • [pdf]
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. Their initial technique is to install solar street lights and small energy systems.
Rapper Akon lights up Africa with solar. Akon, the platinum-selling rapper, is lighting up Africa with solar lighting and other products thanks to a reported $1 billion credit line with Chinese manufacturers and a skill for celebrity networking. June 6, 2017 Charles W. Thurston.
Akon is the brand; he has made remarkable contributions in the music industry. He has now taken his brand beyond his art to power Africa with solar energy. The news of the project grabbed global attention, helping Akon to get marketing opportunities.
Akon is not the first to implement this idea in Africa, but with a credit line of USD 1 billion, several lucrative partnerships and his worldwide fame, his project has grown rapidly. It is considered to be the biggest initiative the continent has seen till date as it promises to provide electricity to 600 million Africans.
ALA specializes in solar power but geographical features of all rural regions of Africa may not support the generation of adequate solar energy that meets the domestic load demand. Countries boasting more days of intensive solar radiation are a great asset for solar PV projects.

The Mubuga Solar Power Station is a grid-connected 7.5 MW power plant in . The power station was constructed between January 2020 and October 2021, by Gigawatt Global Coöperatief, the Netherlands-based multinational (IPP), through its local subsidiary Gigawatt Global Burundi SA. The off-taker for this power station is Régie de production et distribution d’eau et d’électricité (), the Burundian electricity u. [pdf]
The pioneering 7.5 MW solar PV plant has increased Burundi’s generation capacity by over 10%, and is the country’s first substantial energy generation project to go online in over three decades, supplying clean power to tens of thousands of homes and businesses – just before the start of COP26. ( Video)
7.5 MW utility-scale power plant increases East African country’s generation capacity by more than 10% on the eve of COP26 Gitega, Burundi – 25 October 2021: A multinational effort to bring solar power to Burundi has been realized with the commercial operation of the country’s first-ever solar field.
The power station is located in the settlement of Mubuga, in the Gitega Province of Burundi, approximately 15.2 kilometres (9 mi), northeast of the city of Gitega, the political capital of that country. This power station is the first grid-connected solar project developed by an IPP in Burundi.
UK Minister for Energy, Clean Growth and Climate Change, Greg Hands, said: “Today’s launch of Burundi’s first grid-connected solar farm will light up the nation’s energy system. It will strengthen the national grid supply and propel forward a promising future for the country in clean, green energy.
In May 2023, Evariste Ndayishimiye, the president of Burundi toured the solar farm and personally gave his approval for the power station's capacity to be expanded to 15 megawatts. ^ a b c d e Jean Marie Takouleu (26 October 2021).
Remarks by Michael Fichtenberg, MD of Gigawatt Global Burundi SA at a ceremony distributing hand-held solar chargers to community leaders at a football match in the early stages of the project, featuring Patrick Nzitunga, Assistant MD, and the Honorable Jean Jacques NYENIMIGABO, MP of Mubuga zone: .

Since 2004 solar power in Germany has been growing considerably due to the country's feed-in tariffs for renewable energy, which were introduced by the German Renewable Energy Sources Act, and declining PV costs. . accounted for an estimated 12.2% of in 2023, up from 1.9% in 2010 and less than 0.1% in 2000. Germany has been among the for. . During the in the United States, oil prices decreased and the US removed most of its policies that supported its solar industry. Government subsidies were higher in Germany (as well as. [pdf]
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