For years, Juliet Sokou, a food entrepreneur, owned a refrigerator she could not use. The appliance sat in the corner of her food stall in Sahouekomey, a quiet neighborhood on the edge of Lokossa city, a daily reminder of what was just out of reach. Then the poles arrived.
"The benefits of electricity are undeniable," she says, now storing fresh ingredients and working well past sundown. "For years, our routines were governed by the sun. When dusk fell, business ground to a halt."
Today, Sahouekomey's streets are lined with new distribution poles carrying light — and with it, a different kind of future. For Juliet and thousands of women entrepreneurs like her, a connection to the grid is proving to be one of the most direct tools for change: more hours devoted to work, more customers to serve, more income to reinvest.
A National Push, Backed by Investment
Benin has been steadily expanding electricity access since 2016, targeting full coverage by 2030. The World Bank-funded Benin Electricity Access Scale-up (BEAS) Project, approved in 2021 with credit from the International Development Association (IDA), is a cornerstone of that effort. Roughly $183 million is dedicated to infrastructure: at least 1,600 km of medium-voltage lines, 4,000 km of low-voltage lines, and new transformer capacity to support the surge in connections.
The results so far are substantial: more than 144,000 households, 2,789 small businesses, and 451 public institutions connected; 150,000 meters and 20,000 streetlights installed nationwide.
To keep connections affordable, the state utility, the Société béninoise d’énergie électrique (SBEE) subsidizes 80% of the connection cost — removing the biggest barrier for low-income families who had the most to gain and the least means to pay.