The Rockefeller Foundation and the Global Energy Alliance for People and Planet have surpassed the US$100 million mark in funding for Mission 300, the World Bank and African Development Bank’s major initiative aimed at providing electricity access to 300 million Africans by 2030. This represents a dramatic increase from their original US$10 million pledge made just 19 months earlier, highlighting a rapidly growing philanthropic commitment to energy access in sub-Saharan Africa. The announcement, made at the Powering Africa Summit in Washington, reflects a strong belief among development actors that expanding electricity access is one of the most effective ways to reduce poverty across the region, where the majority of the world’s unelectrified population lives.
The funding milestone was presented as a significant statement of intent by both organisations. Rockefeller Foundation President Rajiv Shah described it as the foundation’s largest-ever commitment to electricity access, calling it the most direct pathway out of large-scale poverty. The scale of the pledge also signals that energy access is gaining broader political and development support, with increasing recognition of its role in driving economic and social transformation.
The US$100 million contribution is divided roughly between the two partners, with about 47 percent coming from the Rockefeller Foundation and its public charity arm, RF Catalytic Capital, and 53 percent from the Global Energy Alliance. The funding now supports efforts in 23 African countries, including major focus areas such as Nigeria, Ethiopia, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Kenya and Mozambique.
Mission 300, launched in April 2024 by the World Bank and African Development Bank, has already made significant progress. It has signed National Energy Compacts with 30 countries to establish clear investment priorities and policy reforms needed to accelerate electrification. Since the initiative began, around 44 million people across Africa have reportedly gained access to electricity, with tens of millions more expected to be connected by the end of 2026.
The philanthropic capital is being deployed across several strategic areas. A large share is being used for technical assistance to support National Energy Compact Delivery and Monitoring Units in more than a dozen countries. These government bodies are responsible for coordinating and tracking electrification progress, and the effort also includes 18 Mission 300 Fellows embedded within these units to strengthen delivery capacity.
The funding is also supporting practical energy access solutions that go beyond grid connections. This includes expansion of a productive-use financing facility operated with CLASP, which helps subsidise clean and energy-efficient appliances for farmers and small businesses. By linking electricity access with tools that improve livelihoods and productivity, the initiative aims to ensure that new connections translate into real economic gains for households and communities.
Another key investment is in Zafiri, Mission 300’s permanent capital fund, which provides patient equity for distributed renewable energy programmes. This supports long-term financing for decentralised clean energy solutions, particularly in areas where traditional grid expansion may be difficult or slow. The initiative is therefore combining infrastructure development with innovative financing models to build more sustainable energy systems.
A notable new focus area is clean cooking, which has historically received less investment despite its major health and environmental implications. In sub-Saharan Africa, around 70 percent of households still rely on charcoal or wood for cooking, contributing to respiratory illnesses and deforestation. In response, the alliance has launched a Clean Cooking Accelerator Initiative and is piloting a dedicated Clean Cooking Delivery Unit in Kenya, which could serve as a model for wider adoption across the continent.
Development finance leaders have emphasized that the importance of the US$100 million lies not only in the amount itself, but in its ability to attract much larger pools of public and private capital. The philanthropic funding is intended to reduce investment risk and encourage broader financing flows into Africa’s energy sector. It has already been channelled through mechanisms such as the World Bank’s DARES programme in West and Central Africa and the African Development Bank’s Sustainable Energy Fund for Africa.
Overall, the initiative is being positioned as a strategic effort to turn electricity access into long-term economic opportunity. Supporters argue that reliable energy is one of the strongest predictors of whether households can escape extreme poverty, making electrification a critical foundation for improved livelihoods, business growth and community resilience across Africa.






