Reed Smith Client Alerts

On April 7, 2025, Reed Smith and AfricArb joined forces to co-host a hybrid panel event as part of Paris Arbitration Week: “Energy Transition in Africa: Arbitration at the Crossroads of Sustainability and Development.”

This event brought together leading experts to discuss the critical intersection of arbitration, sustainability, and development within the context of Africa’s evolving energy landscape.

Key takeaways

Africa’s energy transition: complexity and opportunity

The event centered on Africa’s pivotal role in the global energy transition, highlighting the continent’s vast renewable potential (solar, wind, hydro) alongside its continued reliance on hydrocarbons. Speakers emphasized the dual challenge of driving economic development and poverty alleviation while pursuing environmental sustainability. The transition is not just driven by technical issues but by deeply political and legal forces, with energy access framed as a moral and developmental imperative.

Legal frameworks and arbitration’s evolving role

A recurring theme was the need for robust, adaptable legal frameworks to underpin energy projects, ensure investor protection, and uphold public interest. Arbitration was positioned as a critical dispute resolution mechanism, especially given the cross-border, capital-intensive, and public-private nature of many energy projects. However, the panel stressed that arbitration must evolve to address new complexities—such as ESG principles, carbon trading, and social impact obligations—beyond traditional commercial disputes.

Challenges to investment, project bankability and risk mitigation

The discussion highlighted the importance of innovative financing, strategic use of subsidies, and guarantees to de-risk projects, especially in high-risk environment. Institutions like the World Bank play a key role in supporting project structuring, capacity building, and providing financial backstops. The need for transparent, sustainable debt management and equitable sharing of carbon credit revenues was also underscored.