Accra, Ghana: The Africa Energy Technology Centre (AETC), the continent’s premier institution for energy innovation and technology development, has presented its strategic vision for Africa’s energy future to the President of the Republic of Ghana, John Dramani Mahama, during a high-level courtesy call led by its Founder and President, Emelia Cedar-Palm Akumah.
The Africa Energy Technology Centre (AETC) is a pan-African institution headquartered in Accra, Ghana, dedicated to advancing energy technology innovation, youth entrepreneurship, local content development, intellectual property creation, and policy harmonisation across Africa.
The meeting, convened under the auspices of the Minister for Energy and Green Transition, Dr.
John Jinapor brought together senior government officials, energy sector leaders, and members of the AETC Board of Directors to advance Africa’s energy sovereignty, innovation capacity, and industrial transformation.
At the Centre of the discussions was AETC’s ambitious agenda to reposition Africa from a consumer of imported energy technologies to a global producer, innovator, and exporter of Sustainable energy solutions.
Akumah, in her remarks, outlined the Centre’s long-term strategy to build an African energy economy driven by local innovation, entrepreneurship, intellectual property ownership, and technology manufacturing.
“The future is not something we wait for. It is an architecture we build deliberately, courageously, and sustainably,” Akumah said during the engagement.
Under her leadership, the Africa Energy Technology Centre has emerged as a key platform advocating for African-led solutions to the continent’s energy challenges while creating Pathways for economic growth, job creation, and technological independence.
The Centre formally briefed President Mahama on the core transformative initiatives, underpinning its continental energy development strategy.
Youth Energy Entrepreneurship and Incubation Programme (YEEIP) seeks to empower young Africans as innovators, founders, and business leaders within the energy sector through specialised technical training, business incubation, mentorship, and access to financing.
According to AETC, the initiative tackles Africa’s defining developmental challenge head-on by converting raw youth potential into productive, market-leading enterprises.
AETC projects that these ventures will serve as the primary catalyst driving the continent’s next-generation energy revolution.
Africa Smart Energy Technology and Innovation Hub aims to establish Africa as a centre for energy technology research, development, and intellectual property creation.
Ghana National Solar Prosumer Initiative, which focuses on expanding decentralised renewable energy generation through rooftop solar deployment and supportive net-metering policies.
The aim is to enable households, businesses, educational institutions, healthcare facilities, and public agencies to generate and consume their own electricity, reducing pressure on national grids while promoting energy security and sustainability.
Presidential Support for African Energy Technology Conference is a powerful boost to Africa’s energy independence; President Mahama has officially endorsed
the Africa Energy Technology Conference (AETC), solidifying the flagship summit as the continent’s premier platform for energy innovation and strategic investment. Organised by the Africa Energy Technology Centre, this high-level assembly convenes global heads of state,
ministers, institutional investors, technology developers, researchers, and development partners to accelerate intra-African energy trade, spark rapid industrialisation, and secure technological independence.
The Centre hailed the presidential endorsement as a significant boost and a vital catalyst for its mission to deploy African-led solutions to continental energy challenges, driving immediate dialogue and action to accelerate Africa’s energy transformation agenda.
Speaking at the high-level engagement, leadership from the Africa Energy Technology Centre (AETC) underscored that these initiatives form part of a decisive strategy to position the continent not merely as a participant in the global energy transition, but as a primary architect shaping its future.
At the core of the Centre’s mission is a decisive drive to position the continent as a primary producer of global innovation.
The strategy deploys a multi-pronged approach: scaling regional manufacturing capacities, deep-rooted collaborative innovation networks, and fueling homegrown entrepreneurship to launch African-held intellectual property into hyper-competitive
international markets.
The Founder and President of Africa Energy Technology Centre, Akumah, said that the goal is clear: “We are here to forge an energy future that is entirely designed, built, owned, and exported by Africans.”
In a powerful mandate for continental self-reliance, Akumah asserted that Africa will no longer be a mere spectator or a passive consumer in the global energy transition. Instead, the continent is seizing its narrative to become a dominant, self-determined global powerhouse – shifting from a land of untapped potential to a sovereign exporter of innovation, fueled by African intellect, built on African soil, and driven by African ownership.



















