The World Bank has approved $50 million to expand solar-powered agricultural solutions in Nigeria and five other African countries, aiming to boost productivity, cut post-harvest losses and expand clean energy access.
The funding will support the deployment of solar-powered cold rooms, refrigerators, water pumps and grain mills across Kenya, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Sierra Leone, Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
The implementation will be led by Clasp, a Washington DC-based non-profit organisation specialising in energy efficiency and clean energy access, according to programme updates involving the World Bank and its partners, including the Rockefeller Foundation.
The Rockefeller Foundation, which has already committed $12 million to the scheme, has signalled that additional resources may be deployed over time.
“There is always the ability to scale that up,” Rockefeller Foundation president Rajiv Shah said on January 15 during a visit to a solar-powered cold storage facility operated by SokoFresh in Nairobi.
Shah said more resources would be made available country by country. “We finance the innovations, the new projects and the new ideas that governments, the World Bank and others can then take to scale,” he added during a separate visit to a farm facility using solar-powered cold rooms for export-bound produce.
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The financing is being channelled through the Productive Use Financing Facility, an initiative operating under Mission 300, a flagship programme backed by the World Bank and the African Development Bank. Mission 300 aims to mobilise tens of billions of dollars to provide electricity access to 300 million Africans by 2030.
Sub-Saharan Africa remains the epicentre of global energy poverty, accounting for more than 80 percent of the world’s population without access to electricity. An estimated 600 million people in the region still live without reliable power, a gap that continues to constrain economic growth and limit productivity for farmers and small businesses.
The Productive Use Financing Facility is designed to bridge the affordability gap by providing grants, subsidies and technical assistance to suppliers and distributors of solar-powered equipment. The programme focuses on enabling these suppliers to reach rural and off-grid communities that are typically excluded from conventional financing.
Between 2022 and 2024, the facility completed a two-year pilot phase, supporting 24 businesses across the six participating countries. With the pilot phase completed, the programme is now transitioning into full-scale deployment, backed by fresh World Bank financing and philanthropic capital.
The expansion is expected to have significant implications for Nigeria’s agricultural value chain, particularly in tackling post-harvest losses driven by inadequate storage, unreliable electricity and limited access to modern processing tools. Agriculture employs more than a third of Nigeria’s workforce, yet inefficiencies continue to erode farmers’ incomes and food supply.
One of the pilot beneficiaries, SokoFresh, operates solar-powered cold storage facilities and currently serves about 19,000 farmers across East Africa. Solar-powered refrigeration allows farmers to store produce for longer periods, access higher-value markets, and reduce waste across the supply chain.
By scaling access to solar-powered agricultural technologies in Nigeria and other participating countries, the World Bank and its partners aim to improve food security, raise farmers’ incomes and accelerate the transition to clean energy.






