Infinity Power has announced the signing of three agreements supporting renewable energy projects in Africa at the Africa Energy Forum (AEF) 2026 in Cape Town.
The agreements involve partnerships with international technology and engineering companies and are part of Infinity Power’s efforts to expand clean energy capacity in South Africa and Egypt.
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According to Infinity Power, these agreements are a step towards its target of achieving 10GW of operational renewable capacity across Africa by 2032.
During 2024 and 2025, the company added 2.56GW of new solar projects, 200MW of wind projects and 720MW-hours of battery capacity to its project pipeline in Egypt, South Africa and Côte d’Ivoire.
One of the agreements includes a conditional engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contract with Sterling and Wilson for the 285.6MW-peak (MWp) Highveld Solar PV Project in Mpumalanga, South Africa.
This forms part of the South African Government’s Renewable Energy Independent Power Producer Procurement Programme Bid Window 7.
Infinity Power expects the Highveld project to supply electricity to around 167,000 homes and reduce carbon dioxide (CO₂) emissions by approximately 660,000t per year.
The company also signed a conditional EPC letter of award with PowerChina Guizhou Engineering for the 488MWp Negwedi cluster solar projects in Free State, South Africa.
The projects are expected to provide power for approximately 289,000 homes and cut more than 1.1 million tonnes per annum (mtpa) of carbon emissions.
In Egypt, Infinity Power formalised a letter of award with AIKO Energy for the supply of photovoltaic modules for the Nefer Minya Project, a 1.2GW-peak (GWp) solar development in Minya.
The project aims to generate enough energy for around 1.4 million homes and avoid roughly 1.6mtpa of CO₂ emissions.
It will include battery energy storage and is financed by the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development.
The project is expected to contribute to Egypt’s strategy for increasing the share of renewables in the country’s power mix.
Infinity Power co-founder and CEO Nayer Fouad: “By partnering with leading global technology and engineering companies, we are strengthening our ability to deliver large-scale renewable energy projects efficiently and at pace across key African markets.”