Zimbabwe took a historic step toward reshaping its energy landscape. With support from the UN Joint SDG Fund and in partnership with Old Mutual, UNESCO, UNCDF, UNDP, UN Women, and the Government, the country introduced its first Renewable Energy Fund. It is a new model for financing, one designed to light up communities long overlooked by traditional investment.
This transformation is part of Zimbabwe’s first Renewable Energy Fund, launched in late 2024. The Fund seeks to mobilize local financial markets to support renewable energy projects that deliver both financial returns and social impact, accelerating progress on the SDGs in Zimbabwe. Its innovative, gender-responsive design promotes inclusive project selection, skills development, and capacity building, empowering women and youth across the renewable energy value chain.
The Fund brings together public and private capital in a daring blend: $8 million from the UN Joint SDG Fund, matched by $8 million from Old Mutual. That $16 million is only the start. For every dollar invested, the Fund expects to attract more than three dollars in follow-on capital. By the end of 2025, it is projected to grow to $30 million, and by 2026, to $50 million.
Concessional funds take on the risk of early-stage projects and prove that they can work. Once these ventures succeed, commercial investors are more likely to come on board. In practice, it means that hospitals, schools, farms, and even whole communities are gaining reliable energy for the first time, and energy from renewable sources.