Africa: Sun Africa, Exim, African Ministers Set Project-Focused Tone At Powering Africa Summit

Africa: Sun Africa, Exim, African Ministers Set Project-Focused Tone At Powering Africa Summit


Washington, DC — Uganda’s Minister of Energy & Mineral Development, Ruth Ssentamu, stressed that energy access remains central to economic transformation.

The Powering Africa Summit opened with a clear shift toward execution, as Summit Sponsor Sun Africa and senior government leaders called for bankable projects, scalable infrastructure and deeper US-Africa investment ties.

Adam Cortese, CEO of Sun Africa, framed energy as the backbone of industrial growth and cross-Atlantic partnership. “Energy isn’t just a commodity. It’s the lifeblood that connects these pillars, driving economic growth, security, and prosperity on both sides of the Atlantic,” he said.

Pointing to projects already underway, Mr Cortese highlighted the role of US-Africa collaboration in delivering infrastructure on the ground. “These aren’t just power plants. They’re arteries of progress, delivering electricity to remote areas, powering factories, and supporting transportation networks,” he said.


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He also linked energy directly to critical minerals development, announcing a new initiative in Liberia. “This initiative will deliver up to 500 megawatts peak of utility-scale solar generation, 200 megawatt hours of battery storage, and vital infrastructure to support the mining sector,” he said, adding that it will help “secure supply chains that benefitted US industries.”

Mr Cortese emphasised that future projects must be commercially viable. “These are not fleeting policy-driven efforts, they’re built on mutual benefits that endure beyond administrations,” he said, calling for “bankable projects, transparent frameworks, and scalable models.”

From the government, Uganda’s Minister of Energy & Mineral Development, Ruth Ssentamu, stressed that energy access remains central to economic transformation. “We must strive to eliminate energy poverty, as energy access is a foundation of human and economic world made,” she said.

She underscored the need to move from planning to delivery, urging stakeholders to shift “away from power points to power points.” She also warned that access alone is not enough, noting that “simply delivering electricity to people’s homes is not enough. Productive use of this electricity” must drive “genuine socioeconomic development.”

From the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Minister of State for Hydrocarbons, Acacia Mbongo, positioned the country at the centre of the global energy transition. “The global energy transition is ushering in a new era of strategic cooperation,” she said, adding that the DRC is “at the heart of three major challenges for the global energy future: oil, natural gas, and critical minerals.”