FORTUNE+ VIDEO SPONSORED CONTENTS ADVERTORIALS FORTUNE AUDIO Fortune Careers TRADE AFRICA Election 2026 New TIME REMAINING UNTIL ETHIOPIA’S NATIONAL ELECTION 0Days 0Hours 0Minutes 0Seconds



Safaricom Inks Deal With Utility For Electric Bills


Safaricom Inks Deal With Utility For Electric Bills

Safaricom Ethiopia and Ethiopian Electric Utility (EEU) signed an agreement last week that allows the latter's post-paid customers to settle monthly electric bills using the M-PESA mobile money service. Shiferaw Tilla, CEO of a state-owned enterprise, signed the strategic partnership agreement with his counterpart from the only private telecom operator in the country, Wim Vanhelleputt. Safaricom is offering 10pc cash backs for cusomers on their first five transactions to create sufficient interest. The Kenya-based telecom operator has revealed significant expansion plans over the next few years to attain 85pc network coverage by constructing 7,000 new sites. The mobile money market has been dominated by Ethio-telecom's Telebirr, which has amassed over 34 million subscribers in less than three years. Safaricom entered the Ethiopian market nearly three years ago after paying an 850 million dollar licensing fee. The latest agreement with EEU is part of the company's partnerships with local financial institutions and service providers to penetrate the mobile money market more deeply. It will complement EEU's plans to light up 25 million households in a decade. Ethiopia ranks in the bottom three countries in terms of electricity access from the continent with 56 million people in the dark despite generating around 5,200MW of energy from hydroelectric sources.

[ssba-buttons]

Radar

Federal Prosecutors Accuse Public Officials, Contractors of Corruption, Alleged Illicit Fund Transfers

Federal prosecutors have filed corruption and money laundering charges against 11 defendants, including Nigstu Bogale, Coordinator of the Development Project for Response to the Impact of Refugees in the Horn of Africa at the Ministry of Agriculture, Biniyam Fantaye and Taye Habte, senior irrigation engineers involved in the Development Response to Displacement Impacts Project (DRDIP-II), as well as private individuals and construction company representatives. The case alleges losses and illicit...


Radar

EIH Transitions to New Headquarters as It Oversees Major State-Owned Enterprises

Ethiopian Investment Holdings (EIH) is relocating its headquarters from its current site on General Wingate Street. The former headquarters was located behind the Ministry of Industry and near Abrehot Library. The new office is expected to be on Mozambique Street, along the route from Mexico Square to Bulgaria Road. The building belongs to one of EIH's subsidiaries, and all departments are set to move there as interior design and finishing works continue. Under the leadership of Brook Taye...


Radar

Import Substitution Push Lifts Domestic Manufacturing, Industrial Recovery

A push for import substitution and industrial expansion has prioritised 96 strategic products for local manufacturing. The “Ethiopia Tamirt” initiative reports 4.85 billion dollars in savings, supported by trade fairs linking local producers to domestic and international markets. On average, 700 new projects enter the market annually, contributing to more than 2,800 investments over four years. At the grassroots level, 18,000 SMEs have been established, while 993 dormant factories have...