Kenya leads continental push for clean cooking transition through new African coalition

Date: 2026-04-29
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By:  Nana Appiah Acquaye

A high-level meeting convened in Nairobi has advanced discussions on the establishment of the Pan-African Coalition on Universal Access to Clean Cooking (PACUACC), a continental platform aimed at accelerating clean cooking solutions across Africa.

The engagement was led by the Office of the First Lady of the Republic of Kenya, in collaboration with the Executive Office of the President – Office of the Special Envoy for Climate Change, the Ministry of Energy and Petroleum, and a coalition of development partners and stakeholders.

The Office of Kenya’s Special Envoy for Climate Change emphasized that the initiative represents a shift from fragmented interventions toward structured, large-scale delivery mechanisms. Central to this approach is the Clean Cooking Delivery Unit (CCDU), which is working to position clean cooking as an investable and scalable development priority.

Discussions highlighted that clean cooking extends beyond energy access, linking directly to health outcomes, environmental protection, gender equity, and economic productivity. With over 900 million people in Sub-Saharan Africa still relying on polluting cooking methods, participants underscored the urgency of coordinated action.

A key focus of the meeting was the transition from pilot projects to large-scale implementation, supported by structured financing models, reliable data systems, and stronger institutional coordination. Institutions such as schools, hospitals, and correctional facilities were identified as potential anchor points for scaling demand and investment.

The proposed coalition is expected to align political leadership with investment pipelines and delivery frameworks, positioning clean cooking as a structured development and climate finance opportunity.

Stakeholders noted that the emerging platform reflects a broader shift toward execution-focused partnerships, with an emphasis on measurable outcomes and sustained impact across the continent.

The initiative signals growing momentum toward a coordinated African-led clean cooking transition driven by investment, policy alignment, and implementation at scale.

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