December 29 2022

Africa in Review by the Numbers (December 2022)

Review by Kili Partners. Powered by Asoko Insight

$2 billion 
Revenue expected to be raised by horticulture sector in Tanzania by 2023 as the East African country plans to make the industry the largest source of foreign exchange. This will be an increase from the current $750 million annual revenue.
(The Citizen)

200,000 
Improved cookstoves to be delivered across households in Rwanda for free in an initiative aiming to cut harmful household emissions and reduce deforestation. BB Energy will supply the energy efficient cooking stoves sponsored by local subsidiary Société Pétrolière (SP) and local manufacturer Quality Engineering Company.
(Africa Business Communities)

8 million kg
Handling capacity of Kenyan food distribution platform Twiga Food's new distribution centre in Tatu City. The new facility will be the backbone of Twiga's supply chain, enabling partners to access 140,000 customers across Kenya and Uganda.
(Food Business Africa)

$6 billion
Investment in green ammonia by the UK's Hive Energy in South Africa. The project includes a 900,00-tonne-per-year ammonia facility and renewable plants producing 5,000 MW of power annually.
(Afrik21)

1.6 million
Barrels of oil per day produced in Nigeria, more than a four-fold increase, achieved after the implementation of a monitoring system to deter pipeline theft.
(Premium Times)

72% 
Increase on net income interest earned by investors in Kenya who opted to roll over their securities into a new infrastructure bond, benefitting from rising rates on government debt. The investors were given an alternative to take up a six-year infrastructure bond instead of cash on maturing Treasury bills.
(Business Daily Africa)

$1 billion
Investment plan pledged by Visa to drive digital transformation in Africa, scale operations, deploy new technologies and deepen collaborations with partners by 2027 to further scale Visa's operations in Africa.
(Techbuild.Africa)

85%
Share of DRC's Trust Merchant Bank acquired by Kenya's KCB. The deal, first announced in August, adds a sixth East African market to KCB's holdings through the 109-branch lender.
(Business Daily)

22,000 megawatts
Electricity generation capacity in Nigeria after the government added additional 4000 megawatts to boost power generation in the West African country. Additionally, 6000 megawatts of capacity was added to the transmission network to support electricity supplies.
(Vanguard)