Energy Transition Africa (ETA) has launched a new fellows programme aimed at addressing what it describes as a critical shortage of skilled professionals needed to govern, finance, analyse and communicate Africa’s energy transition, warning that the continent’s clean energy ambitions could falter without stronger human capital development.

The organisation on Friday announced the ETA fellows programme, an eleven-week, production-based fellowship designed for African professionals working in or around the energy sector.

It said applications for cohort zero, the inaugural edition, are now open, with the programme scheduled to begin on 30 July 2026.

ETA said the initiative is built on the premise that Africa’s energy transition will succeed or fail not because of insufficient infrastructure or financing, but due to the quality of professionals available to manage increasingly complex systems of energy governance and investment.

Across the continent, governments are accelerating renewable energy deployment and pursuing cleaner power systems backed by multilateral financing and private capital.

But ETA argues that institutional capacity has not kept pace with these developments, leaving gaps in regulatory oversight, financial scrutiny and public accountability.

It said many governments continue to negotiate complex energy financing agreements without adequate internal analytical capacity, while regulators are often required to supervise evolving energy markets using outdated frameworks inherited from fundamentally different power systems.

Civil society organisations, it added, frequently lack the technical depth required to interrogate financial structures, while journalists are often unable to fully unpack the implications of policy and investment decisions shaping the sector.

According to ETA, the result is not only weak communication around energy transition policies, but also limited institutional leverage at a time when decisions being made will have long-term implications for Africa’s economic and energy future.

The organisation said the fellows programme is intended as a direct response to this gap, offering a structured pathway for professionals to develop high-level analytical, communication and institutional skills through practical production-based work rather than conventional classroom training.

Under the programme structure, fellows will undergo four stages of development: Foundation, which builds analytical frameworks and Africa-centred thinking; Interrogation, which places participants in live problem-solving scenarios drawn from real-world energy sector challenges; Production, which requires fellows to produce published analytical essays of between 1,500 and 2,000 words under editorial standards; and Influence, which focuses on leadership, communication and institutional engagement skills.

Unlike traditional training programmes, ETA said participants will not receive certification based on attendance, but will be required to produce published analytical work that serves as the primary measure of performance and professional credibility.

At the end of the programme, successful participants will join the College of ETA Fellows, a permanent intellectual community designed to support continued engagement, collaboration and professional development.

Members will receive access to policy discussions, research collaboration opportunities, speaking engagements, and a publicly accessible directory of fellows.

The College will also host annual gatherings and produce periodic briefings aimed at sustaining engagement among alumni while facilitating pathways into policy, research and leadership roles across the energy sector.

Speaking on the launch, Vincent Egoro, executive director of Energy Transition Africa, said the programme was designed to address a fundamental structural weakness in Africa’s energy transition.
“Africa is deploying a clean energy future it cannot maintain, not because the technology fails but because the people required to sustain it were never built. That is the founding thesis of ETA, and it is the problem the Fellows Programme exists to address,” he said.

Egoro added that the initiative seeks to develop professionals capable of operating at the centre of energy decision-making across the continent.

“We are not building commentators. We are building the analysts, communicators, and institutional actors who will be in the rooms where Africa’s transition decisions are made over the next twenty years and whose work will hold those rooms accountable,” he said.

“The credential they carry when they leave is not a certificate. It is a published argument that meets a globally credible analytical standard. That distinction is the point.”

ETA said applicants for cohort zero are expected to be professionals with three to eight years of experience in government, civil society, journalism, development finance, research, consultancy or advocacy roles within the energy transition ecosystem.

Participants are expected to already be producing some form of analytical output, including policy documents, research work, journalism, technical reports or public commentary, which the programme will help refine into more rigorous, publication-ready arguments.

Applications are open via energytransitionafrica.com/fellows, with the deadline set for 30 June 2026. The organisation said Cohort Zero will admit a limited number of fellows through a competitive selection process.

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