An initiative by the US to increase electricity supply in Africa has been dismantled by US President Donald Trump’s administration after more than a decade of work, Bloomberg News reported on Wednesday, citing people familiar with the matter. Almost all of Power Africa’s programmes have been listed for termination and the majority of its staff fired, the report added, citing unnamed sources. Some remaining programmes, particularly those aimed at connecting projects with US companies, may be retained under other US agencies, the report added. Almost all of Power Africa’s programmes have been listed for termination and the majority of its staff fired The Power Africa initiative, which was launched in 2013 by then-President Barack Obama, aims to bring electricity to tens of millions of households in Africa. “Each programme is undergoing a review with the goal of restructuring assistance to serve US interests,” Bloomberg reported, quoting a state department spokesman. “Programmes that serve our nation’s interests will continue. However, programmes that aren’t aligned with our national interest will not,” an official from the department told Bloomberg in a reply to questions. An e-mail to the US state department’s office requesting comment was not immediately answered. Read: Rising prices are deepening the electricity divide in SA Power Africa was operated under the US government’s relief provider, USAid, the first high-profile target of the effort to slash federal government spending led by billionaire Elon Musk’s department of government efficiency. — Mrinmay Dey, (c) 2025 Reuters Get breaking news from TechCentral on WhatsApp. Sign up here Don’t miss: Mission 300: the plan to bring electricity to 300 million people across Africa