According to the World Economic Forum‘s Energy Transition Index 2026, the region recorded the strongest gains of any geography worldwide, even as overall transition readiness fell for the first time in more than a decade.
The WEF’s latest Energy Transition Index tracks 120 countries across 44 indicators, covering system performance and readiness for cleaner, more secure and affordable energy. The 2026 edition shows a notable setback: transition readiness declined, with four of the five enabling dimensions weakening at the same time. Those dimensions include regulation, infrastructure, capital, innovation and human capital.
This reversal comes despite record global capital deployment. The report estimates US$3.3 trillion in total energy investment in 2025, of which US$2.3 trillion went into clean energy technologies and infrastructure. Yet that investment has not translated into broad-based gains in readiness, highlighting structural bottlenecks rather than a lack of capital at the system level.
The WEF notes that the global shift is now shaped by tighter geopolitics, higher electricity demand, grid and permitting bottlenecks, and unequal access to finance. Emerging economies, many of them in Africa, now account for about 80% of global electricity demand growth, driven by economic expansion, urbanisation, digital infrastructure and rising access needs.
However, about three-quarters of global clean energy investment still flows to a relatively small group of countries, leaving a widening gap between where capital is deployed and where demand is growing fastest. This is the core risk — and opportunity — around the Africa energy transition.
Against this backdrop, Sub-Saharan Africa stands out. The region delivered the strongest gains of any region in the index, even as Latin America and the Middle East and North Africa recorded setbacks linked to weaker policies, softer infrastructure spending and lower readiness. The WEF highlights expanding renewable projects, efforts to increase electricity access and policy moves to attract investment as key drivers of the region’s score improvement.
Roberto Bocca, head of the WEF Centre for Energy and Materials, argues the transition “is not reversing, but it is fracturing,” with security, affordability and resilience now central to sustaining progress. Recent disruptions in strategic chokepoints such as the Strait of Hormuz underscore how exposed import-dependent emerging markets remain to supply shocks and price volatility.
For investors, the signal is clear. Sub-Saharan Africa is becoming one of the few markets where rising electricity demand, infrastructure build-out and capital needs align into a visible, long-term pipeline. The region’s outperformance on the Energy Transition Index does not reflect a high absolute base. Rather, it reflects meaningful progress from a constrained starting point, driven by governments that increasingly view renewables and grids as growth enablers.
The WEF identifies three priorities to sustain and monetise this progress: integrating energy security and resilience into system design; accelerating grid expansion and wider infrastructure; and improving investment conditions through stable policy and targeted capital flows. These are all areas where private and development finance can play complementary roles.
The capital allocation imbalance is particularly relevant. With 80% of incremental electricity demand coming from emerging markets but only about 25% of clean-energy capital reaching them, there is structural room for more risk-tolerant capital, blended finance and local-currency solutions in Africa. Grid investments, storage, flexible generation and digital infrastructure around distribution and metering all present scalable opportunities tied to the Africa energy transition.
The WEF report concludes that countries able to strengthen resilience, expand infrastructure and attract investment will convert today’s pressures into long-term economic and competitive gains. For institutional investors and financiers, Sub-Saharan Africa’s recent performance suggests the region is moving into that category. The next phase will hinge on whether policy reforms, grid build-out and new capital structures can turn index gains into bankable projects at scale — an arc that will define the investable frontier of the Africa energy transition over the coming decade.
The post Sub-Saharan Africa Leads Global Energy Transition appeared first on FurtherAfrica.


