ACTIVITY TITLE
Ubuntu Energy
Reported by
ACTIVITY SCOPE COLLABORATION TYPE AID TYPE FINANCE TYPE FLOW TYPE TIED STATUS HIERARCHY
National 4 Bilateral 1
Other technical assistance D02
Standard grant 110 ODA 10 Untied 1
Planned start date 2024-05-01
Planned end date 2026-04-30
Actual start date 2024-05-01
activity status: Implementation
The activity is currently being implemented
WHO'S INVOLVED ( 4 )
PARTICIPATING ORG REFERENCE ROLE TYPE
DEPARTMENT FOR SCIENCE, INNOVATION AND TECHNOLOGY
REF GB-GOV-26
Funding Government
DRE PARTNERS LTD
Implementing Other
INNOVATE UK
REF GB-GOV-32
Accountable Other Public Sector
INNOVATE UK
REF GB-GOV-32
Extending Other Public Sector
General
This project aims to build community resilience in sub-Saharan Africa using Energy Ubuntu as a vehicle. It is akin to the 'Uber of Energy', democratising power sharing, transforming wasted energy into community power, and empowering communities to drive their development through sustainable means. It seeks to transform waste energy to community power for productive use. It addresses the developmental challenges of lack of modern and clean energy access, energy poverty and the harmful effects of global warming by improving access to clean and reliable electricity and deriving new business and economic change models, and building capabilities and contributing to SDGs 1,3,4,5,7,8,9,11,12,13. Nigeria's electricity sector faces a problem. Its Distributed Energy Resources (DERs) are sub-optimally utilized and substantially wasteful, while it has deficient electricity access of ~60%. Solar photovoltaic (PV) systems are up to 400% oversized or lack the mechanism required to utilize their generation potential. Some PV systems are up to 80% used during the weekdays but are 20% utilized on weekends. Rural communities only utilize about 5% of the potential PV energy. Yet, 85 million Nigerians have no electricity access, costing Nigeria $26 billion annually for self-generation using carbon-intensive generators, causing excessive carbon emissions and energy waste because excess generation cannot be fed into the grid. To address this challenge, Energy Ubuntu delivers a design and pilot of a smart grid (SG) peer-to-peer (P2P) energy-sharing framework that enables the distribution of excess generation potential to energy consumers to enhance PV capacity utilization and minimize energy waste while providing clean and affordable electricity. It improves PV usage by incentivizing individuals or businesses to sell energy to potential consumers in a peer-to-peer system. The consumers will be SMEs and homes near solar PV systems in rural and urban communities. The project will be implemented over two years with critical deliverables of smart grid design, energy trading software, energy data mining and machine learning models for energy supply, deployment of smart circuitry in 200 sites, energy trade, and the evolution of new business models and community resilience initiatives. It will be implemented by four teams, Greenage Technologies (Technical lead), Nithio (Technical partner), Oxford EPG (research lead), and DRE Partners Ltd (formerly Kula Foods) (Admin Lead). Some co-benefits can be derived from Energy Ubuntu, including sustainable community development and carbon emission reduction leading to improved standards of living while significantly decreasing CO2 emissions.
Objectives
This project aims to build community resilience in sub-Saharan Africa using Energy Ubuntu as a vehicle. It is akin to the 'Uber of Energy', democratising power sharing, transforming wasted energy into community power, and empowering communities to drive their development through sustainable means. It seeks to transform waste energy to community power for productive use. It addresses the developmental challenges of lack of modern and clean energy access, energy poverty and the harmful effects of global warming by improving access to clean and reliable electricity and deriving new business and economic change models, and building capabilities and contributing to SDGs 1,3,4,5,7,8,9,11,12,13. Nigeria's electricity sector faces a problem. Its Distributed Energy Resources (DERs) are sub-optimally utilized and substantially wasteful, while it has deficient electricity access of ~60%. Solar photovoltaic (PV) systems are up to 400% oversized or lack the mechanism required to utilize their generation potential. Some PV systems are up to 80% used during the weekdays but are 20% utilized on weekends. Rural communities only utilize about 5% of the potential PV energy. Yet, 85 million Nigerians have no electricity access, costing Nigeria $26 billion annually for self-generation using carbon-intensive generators, causing excessive carbon emissions and energy waste because excess generation cannot be fed into the grid. To address this challenge, Energy Ubuntu delivers a design and pilot of a smart grid (SG) peer-to-peer (P2P) energy-sharing framework that enables the distribution of excess generation potential to energy consumers to enhance PV capacity utilization and minimize energy waste while providing clean and affordable electricity. It improves PV usage by incentivizing individuals or businesses to sell energy to potential consumers in a peer-to-peer system. The consumers will be SMEs and homes near solar PV systems in rural and urban communities. The project will be implemented over two years with critical deliverables of smart grid design, energy trading software, energy data mining and machine learning models for energy supply, deployment of smart circuitry in 200 sites, energy trade, and the evolution of new business models and community resilience initiatives. It will be implemented by four teams, Greenage Technologies (Technical lead), Nithio (Technical partner), Oxford EPG (research lead), and DRE Partners Ltd (formerly Kula Foods) (Admin Lead). Some co-benefits can be derived from Energy Ubuntu, including sustainable community development and carbon emission reduction leading to improved standards of living while significantly decreasing CO2 emissions.
policy marker( 8 )
CODELIST SIGNIFICANCE VOCABULARY DESCRIPTION
Gender Equality significant objective OECD DAC CRS Significant (secondary) policy objectives are those which, although important, were not the prime motivation for undertaking the activity.
Disaster Risk Reduction(DRR) not targeted OECD DAC CRS The score "not targeted" means that the activity was examined but found not to target the policy objective.
Disability not targeted OECD DAC CRS The score "not targeted" means that the activity was examined but found not to target the policy objective.
Nutrition not targeted OECD DAC CRS The score "not targeted" means that the activity was examined but found not to target the policy objective.
Aid Targeting the Objectives of the Convention on Biological Diversity not targeted OECD DAC CRS The score "not targeted" means that the activity was examined but found not to target the policy objective.
Aid Targeting the Objectives of the Framework Convention on Climate Change - Mitigation principal objective OECD DAC CRS Principal (primary) policy objectives are those which can be identified as being fundamental in the design and impact of the activity and which are an explicit objective of the activity. They may be selected by answering the question "Would the activity have been undertaken without this objective?"
Aid Targeting the Objectives of the Framework Convention on Climate Change - Adaptation not targeted OECD DAC CRS The score "not targeted" means that the activity was examined but found not to target the policy objective.
Aid Targeting the Objectives of the Convention to Combat Desertification not targeted OECD DAC CRS The score "not targeted" means that the activity was examined but found not to target the policy objective.
recipient country ( 1 )
NigeriaNG
100
sector ( 1 )
OECD DAC CRS 5 digit1( 1 )
The sector reported corresponds to an OECD DAC CRS 5-digit purpose code http://reference.iatistandard.org/codelists/Sector/
Energy generation, renewable sources - multiple technologies23210
100
GLOSSARY
Energy generation, renewable sources - multiple technologiesRenewable energy generation programmes that cannot be attributed to one single technology (codes 23220 through 23280 below). Fuelwood/charcoal production should be included under forestry 31261.
Financial Overview
Outgoing Commitment ( 1 )
Disbursement ( 6 )
Planned Disbursement ( 9 )
Budget ( 2 )
Outgoing Commitment
Disbursement
Planned Disbursement
Budget
Budget ( 2 )
START END TYPE STATUS VALUE
2024-04-01 2025-03-31 Original Indicative 308,787.93
GBP
2025-04-01 2026-03-31 Original Indicative 108,736.58
GBP
Budget
Planned Disbursement ( 9 )
START END TYPE PROVIDER RECEIVER VALUE
2024-07-01 2024-09-30 Original
DEPARTMENT FOR SCIENCE, INNOVATION AND TECHNOLOGY
REF GB-GOV-26
Government
72,017.63
GBP
2024-10-01 2024-12-31 Revised
DEPARTMENT FOR SCIENCE, INNOVATION AND TECHNOLOGY
REF GB-GOV-26
Government
122,535.45
GBP
2025-01-01 2025-03-31 Revised
DEPARTMENT FOR SCIENCE, INNOVATION AND TECHNOLOGY
REF GB-GOV-26
Government
124,991.34
GBP
2025-04-01 2025-06-30 Revised
DEPARTMENT FOR SCIENCE, INNOVATION AND TECHNOLOGY
REF GB-GOV-26
Government
21,251.23
GBP
2025-07-01 2025-09-30 Revised
DEPARTMENT FOR SCIENCE, INNOVATION AND TECHNOLOGY
REF GB-GOV-26
Government
81,762.39
GBP
2025-10-01 2025-12-31 Revised
DEPARTMENT FOR SCIENCE, INNOVATION AND TECHNOLOGY
REF GB-GOV-26
Government
94,579.08
GBP
2026-01-01 2026-03-31 Revised
DEPARTMENT FOR SCIENCE, INNOVATION AND TECHNOLOGY
REF GB-GOV-26
Government
95,422.05
GBP
2026-04-01 2026-06-30 Revised
DEPARTMENT FOR SCIENCE, INNOVATION AND TECHNOLOGY
REF GB-GOV-26
Government
68,683.74
GBP
2026-07-01 2026-09-30 Revised
DEPARTMENT FOR SCIENCE, INNOVATION AND TECHNOLOGY
REF GB-GOV-26
Government
19,980.95
GBP
Planned Disbursement
Transactions ( 7 )
Outgoing Commitment ( 1 )
DATE DESCRIPTION PROVIDER RECEIVER VALUE
2024-05-01
708,951
GBP
Outgoing Commitment
Disbursement ( 6 )
DATE DESCRIPTION PROVIDER RECEIVER VALUE
2024-09-30
1,882.89
GBP
2024-12-31
164,476.02
GBP
2025-03-31
142,429.02
GBP
2025-06-30
67,451.21
GBP
2025-09-30
93,100.17
GBP
2025-12-31
93,775.81
GBP
Disbursement
General Enquiries
DEPARTMENT FOR SCIENCE, INNOVATION AND TECHNOLOGY
General enquiries
Department for Science, Innovation and Technology, 22-26 Whitehall, London, SW1A 2EG