Dubbed Viridis Africa, the event is dedicated to entrepreneurs and corporate institutions seeking funding to introduce clean technology solutions and services.
Principals who would present their business opportunities at this event would have the audience of numerous local and foreign investors, stratified according to their interest and investment criteria.
“It will be bigger, better, more defined and refined in achieving its stated goal of bringing together both investors and entrepreneurs from Africa to meet with their counterparts from around the world in order to pursue the objective of setting up clean technologies businesses in the continent holding commercial promise” stated Suza Adam, event organizer.
Investors
would include venture capital, private equity, project and corporate finance
outfits and project developers dedicated to the cleantech sector.
They
would also include North American, European funding agencies, major Asian
industrial conglomerates, technology specific investment funds and major
companies who seek strategic alliance and acquisitions.
For
African entrepreneurs and their businesses, the Johannesburg held event will
prove most beneficial in a much as it will allow them to meet with potential
global partners, both in technology and finance so as to evaluate and execute
projects.
Area of
interest include renewable energy, provision of potable water, solid
waste recycling, effluent treatment and other projects that aside of
their commercial merits would have even greater socio-economic benefits and
impact on the people and environment of the continent for years to come.
Some
projects in the past, although technologically sound, could not be justified
commercially, nor technically, as support infrastructure – human resource and
even reliable energy supply - could not be sustained.
Africa
is now becoming the focus of the developed nations as far as inward investment
into the continent, so as to “fire up” economic development, there is much
anticipation that infrastructural development will ensue, said Suza.
Thus,
the provision of energy, water – for drinking, agricultural and industrial use
– as well as other objectives such as road infrastructure and telecommunication
will become a priority.
Therefore
in Africa the concept of “clean technology” is more about the ability to answer
to the said needs in a more independent manner, than what is currently possible
- that is deploying energy generating capacity that is not reliant on massive
infrastructural setup, but rather small scale and scalable solutions adapted to
remote and rural regions within a country.
Similarly
innovative solutions regarding water treatment and purification coupled with
that of industrial effluents can also be deployed on the basis of small
scale and scalable range of solutions, thereby commercially justified as per
community and regions’ needs.
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