Ten years ago, if you flew over the Rift Valley at night, you’d see basically nothing. Huge stretches of Kenya, Tanzania, and Ethiopia are completely dark. Cities hundreds of miles away are glowing, but out here in the valleys? Just blackness. That’s different now, the reason? BTC mining. Thousands of rigs are humming away, powered by hydro dams, volcanic steam, and solar installations.
The economics are simple, maybe too simple. Africa is sitting on incredible renewable resources, but its transmission infrastructure is in dire need of improvement. Build a dam somewhere remote, and you can generate gigawatts, sure. Except only a fraction of those watts will ever reach paying customers. They’ve had years of surplus power sitting idle or shut down at sunset. Complete waste.
Then miners showed up with shipping containers full of ASICs and basically said, “We’ll buy every electron you can’t sell.” Cash upfront.
Ethiopia was one of the earliest countries to sign a large deal. The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam generates over 6,000 megawatts, but the grid cannot absorb even half that amount. By mid-2025, you had approximately twenty-three mining operations, initially led by Asian companies, followed by the Americans, and then locals getting in on the action—all collectively pulling around 600 megawatts at 3.2 cents per kWh. That’s a great deal compared to North American prices. The State utility pocketed over $100 million in hard currency in ten months. New Capital is already funding new substations and rural lines. Villages scheduled to receive electricity in 2035 received it this year instead because mining revenue made everything pencil out.
Kenya took a totally different approach. On a smaller scale, mini-grids instead of giant infrastructure. A Jack Dorsey ompany called Gridless operates seven sites across Kenya, Malawi, and Zambia now. The setup’s actually clever. You’ve got a rural hydro plant generating 200 kilowatts. The village needs maybe 50 at peak. That leftover 150 just vanished before. Gridless drops containers in, mines BTC off surplus power, and throttles down immediately when a clinic or welder needs electricity. The result is locals pay 60% less than before, and the plant owner finally makes a profit. One site near the Zambian border keeps the lights on for roughly 15,000 people and still sends BTC to Nairobi wallets every ten minutes.
The Democratic Republic of Congo operates a small program inside Virunga National Park, employing rangers who are funded by hydroelectric resources and protect mountain gorillas. South African solar developers bundle daytime panels with evening mining loads to secure bank financing that they’d never obtain with residential customers alone. Nigeria, which is often associated with gas flaring, has operations that capture waste methane from rigs instead of burning it off into the atmosphere.
Not everyone loves this, obviously. Angola banned mining outright after rogue operators fried neighborhood transformers. Parts of Ethiopia worry mining contracts will eventually crowd out households once grid capacity catches up. But economics keep winning. Cambridge pegs Africa at roughly 3% of global BTC hash rate, nearly all hydro, geothermal, or solar. That’s expected to double by 2027, with Rwanda negotiating small modular reactors and Malawi completing new Shire River dams.
It’s hard to quantify, but impossible to miss if you’re traveling in these areas. Kids are doing homework under LED bulbs installed because miners needed power infrastructure. Mechanics learning cooling system and inverter maintenance—skills directly applicable to grid work. Farmers run irrigation at night when solar miners shut off and capacity frees up. Capital that used to leave buying diesel stays in-country, cycling through local payrolls and taxes.
BTC mining isn’t a miracle of development. Profits swing wildly with price; badly designed projects absolutely wreck weak grids. However, places where traditional utilities have failed for decades suddenly have miners as their buyers of last resort. Customers are willing to fund a substation so everyone else gets lights, too.
The sun drops fast across Africa, but darkness isn’t as pervasive as it once was. Somewhere in valleys barely on maps, machines convert wasted electrons into BTC and—almost an afterthought—into the first reliable power many families ever had.
Watch: Tech redefines how things are done—Africa is here for it
Source: https://coingeek.com/africa-power-play-how-btc-mining-turns-wasted-energy-to-light/