South Africa, Kenya, and Morocco invest in electric car charging stations

South Africa, Kenya, and Morocco invest in electric car charging stations

Editor Wakesho
photo/courtesy

Electric vehicle charge station is gaining momentum in Africa. Countries such as South Africa, Kenya, and Morocco have potential investors who want to invest by installing charge stations.  In Africa, the main focus is on South Africa, Morocco, Kenya, and, to a lesser extent, aspirational markets such as Uganda.

Governments and players in the vehicle, real estate, and oil-marketing sectors keen on facilitating the transition from “dirty” to “clean” fuel, are already putting up electric charging infrastructure to offer facilities to a nascent fleet of electric vehicles.

“More and more people are inclining towards electric vehicles with the growing awareness regarding environmental issues globally,” said Data Bridge researchers in their the Middle East and Africa Electric Vehicle Charging Stations Market forecast to 2029.

Over the 2022-29 period, the research firm projects the market to grow from a valuation of $129.85-million -in 2021 to $9.39-billion.

In South Africa, German carmaker Audi took the competition in this segment a notch higher when it announced in January the planned installation of 70 ultra-fast (150 kilowatts) public charging stations at 33 sites. The charge points provide a direct current that will fully charge vehicles in less than an hour.

The charging points being implemented with the electric vehicle charging authority, GridCars, are lined up on major highways connecting Johannesburg and Cape Town while others are spread to cover public lifestyle and recreation facilities.

Jaguar is also in partnership with GridCars in a deal that will see 82 public charging stations installed in the country’s major hubs and along frequently-traveled holiday routes. The $1.87-million -infrastructure investment targets the country’s major hubs including Johannesburg, Pretoria, Durban, Cape Town, Port Elizabeth, East London, and Bloemfontein.

In Kenya, Rwanda-based start-up Ampersand is partnering with the French oil marketer, Total Energies, to leverage its nationwide network to expand its presence in the country.

Ampersand is looking to tap into 141 of TotalEnergies’ 226 service stations that are already solar-powered, to put up battery charge swap stations. Already, three stations have been mapped in Nairobi’s upmarket estates to power the batteries of drivers of electric motorbikes.

Josh Whale said by leveraging TotalEnergies’ incredible experience to expand our network of battery exchange stations, we can grow much faster than we previously thought.

Another e-mobility start-up, EkoRent, has partnered with Strathmore University Research Centre in Nairobi to launch “Nopea SolarHub” in an agreement that establishes solar-powered charging stations for NopeaRide’s electric cars. The new charging station network is expected to be operational by the third quarter of 2022.

The opportunity has also attracted real estate firm Dowgate Properties, which has gone outside of Nairobi to set up electric vehicle charging stations in the town of Naivasha and in Kenya’s fourth-biggest city, Nakuru.

Other players in this market include e-mobility firms, Drive Electric, ChargeNet, and Kenya Power, the country’s electricity distributor, which has announced partnership plans with mobility firms for electricity supply.

South Africa, the most advanced e-mobility market in Africa, had about 1 000 electric vehicles in January 2022 out of a total fleet of 12 million vehicles, while the number of EVs was estimated at 350 in Kenya out of some 2.2 million registered vehicles in the country, according to Statista.

In Uganda, electric mobility start-up Zembo last week announced the installation of four solar and hybrid charging stations along a 120-kilometer stretch of road on the Kampala-Masaka axis.

Zembo’s operations manager, Titus Kimbowa, said the firm, “is positioning to be the country’s leading battery exchange operator by creating a national network of charging stations”.

Its strategy includes reaching off-grid areas where it is difficult for drivers to find affordable fuel and even harder to find electricity.

In Morocco, Afrimobility announced in November 2021, that it plans to install a large network of fast-charging stations for electric cars in Morocco. In a statement, it said multiple stations will be developed between Tangier and Agadir — separated by almost 700km.

Source:

i) Conrad Onyango (2022) South Africa, Kenya and Morocco invest in electric car charging stations.