Congo secures $1 billion from World Bank to revive world's largest hydropower project
The World Bank has pledged a $1 billion fund to advance the Democratic Republic of Congo's hydropower initiatives.
$250 million will support the Inga III phase of the Grand Inga hydropower project.
Currently, only 20% of Congo's population has access to electricity, prompting a $36 billion national power development plan.
The World Bank has pledged $1 billion to help the Democratic Republic of Congo prepare as it prepares for the next phase of what could be the world's biggest hydropower project.
The bank plans to commit $250 million toward Inga III, a portion of the Grand Inga hydropower complex. The project builds on earlier phases, Inga I, a 351-megawatt plant commissioned in 1972, and Inga II, a 1,424-megawatt facility launched a decade later.
The Inga site on the Congo River, the world's third-largest river by volume, has the potential to eventually generate around 40,000 megawatts of electricity. This is nearly twice the capacity of China's Three Gorges Dam, currently the world's largest hydropower facility at 22,500 megawatts, according to Bloomberg.
However, progress has been stalled for years due to conflict, corruption scandals, and high costs.
The Inga III project
Inga III forms part of the World Bank's Mission 300 program, which has an ambitious target to bring electricity to 300 million Africans by 2030. The World Bank President Ajay Banga says the broader effort could attract up to $85 billion in private investment.
Once completed, the project, expected to cost $10 billion, could generate 11,000 megawatts of power, which is more than three times Congo's current capacity.
The first $250 million tranche will fund technical studies, support economic development, reform the state-owned electricity company, and help attract private developers for the facility on the Congo River.
Congo's government is keen on tripling its citizens' access to power by 2030. A $36 billion plan to develop the country's power sector, where only about 20% of the country's more than 100 million people currently have access to electricity, was unveiled at a Mission 300 conference in Dar es Salaam in January.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
an hour ago
- Bloomberg
US-Sanctioned Russian LNG Heads to Asia in Search for Buyers
Several liquefied natural gas tankers are heading to Asia from a Russian export facility sanctioned by the US, potentially testing Washington's resolve to crack down on the trade amid high-level talks over the war in Ukraine. The Iris and Voskhod vessels, which are carrying shipments from the Arctic LNG 2 plant in Siberia, began traveling to North Asia via the Northern Sea Route on Aug. 15 after being idled for weeks, according to ship-tracking data compiled by Bloomberg. Two other tankers that recently loaded at the plant also started heading toward Asia last week.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Ringgit set for strong rally to one-year high as foreign investment surges to record levels
KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 18 — The ringgit is expected to resume its rally and potentially reach its strongest level against the US dollar in nearly a year, according to analysts who cite dovish central bank policies and fiscal commitments as key drivers. Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. predicts the ringgit will strengthen to 4.15 per dollar in the fourth quarter due to anticipated central bank easing, while Malayan Banking Bhd. Forecasts 4.10 by December, Bloomberg reported. MUFG Bank Ltd. Expects a 1.5 per cent gain from current levels, attributing this to improved export competitiveness following a US tariff deal with Malaysia. The ringgit's recovery from its April low has recently stalled, but upcoming inflation data could revive expectations for Bank Negara Malaysia rate cuts and stimulate bond inflows. Global funds invested a record US$4.3 billion into Malaysian bonds in the second quarter, anticipating rate cuts from Southeast Asia's last holdout central bank, which delivered a 25-basis-point reduction in July. Christopher Wong of OCBC said that a stronger ringgit depends on sustained foreign inflows and the government's commitment to fiscal consolidation, with his bank projecting another rate cut this year. Last month, Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim announced an ambitious five-year growth plan through 2030, including a one-time RM2.8 billion stimulus package featuring cash handouts and reduced fuel prices. The government has simultaneously pursued fiscal discipline through measures such as cutting diesel subsidies and expanding the sales and service tax. Matthew Ryan of Ebury Partners warns that prolonged trade uncertainty and potential higher tariffs could moderately impact Malaysia's economy and trigger a more pronounced ringgit selloff. The ringgit closed at 4.2120 on Friday, with MUFG's Lloyd Chan pointing out government-led structural reforms aimed at boosting productivity and fiscal discipline as foundational factors for the currency's strength.


Bloomberg
2 hours ago
- Bloomberg
China Stock Gauge Set for Decade High Driven by Savings Glut
A gauge of Shanghai-listed stocks is set for its highest close in a decade, as cash-rich local investors plow into a market that has surged amid easing trade tensions with the US. The Shanghai Stock Exchange Composite Index jumped as much as 0.5% to 3,715.93 on Monday, putting it on course for its highest close since August 2015, according to Bloomberg-compiled data. That cements a roughly 20% turnaround since an April selloff, when US President Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs roiled global markets. Trump extended a tariff truce with China last week.