CIPA pledges to build new institution to drive Africa’s clean, bankable infrastructure transition
The Founder and Chief Executive Officer of CIPA Holdings Group, Kwaku Osei-Sarpong, has pledged to build a new generation of African institutions capable of shaping Ghana’s and the continent’s transition toward clean, inclusive and bankable infrastructure, anchored on trust, governance and long-term value creation.
The pledge follows CIPA Holdings Group’s recognition in the 2025 Ghana Edition of Forbes Africa, which profiled the Ghanaian-born firm as a climate-resilient infrastructure institution influencing how Africa’s green transition is financed, structured and delivered.
The publication highlighted CIPA’s integrated, governance-first model that bridges policy advisory, project development and technical execution across multiple African markets.
“Africa doesn’t just need new infrastructure; it needs new institutions of trust. Our mission at CIPA is to build both,” Mr Osei-Sarpong said in an interview with Forbes Africa, underscoring the philosophy driving the Group’s expansion and institutional ambition.
Under his leadership, CIPA has evolved from a national platform into a Pan-African infrastructure institution aligned with Africa’s long-term energy, industrialisation and sustainability goals, while remaining firmly rooted in Ghana’s transition agenda.
Forbes Africa noted that this dual focus—local grounding combined with continental reach—positions CIPA as part of a new class of African institutions redefining the infrastructure narrative from dependency to self-determination.
Headquartered in Accra, CIPA Holdings has expanded its footprint with active engagements and development pipelines in Ghana, Nigeria, Mali, Burkina Faso, Zambia and South Africa.
The expansion reflects the Group’s ambition to support governments, industries and commercial clients navigating the shift to more resilient, low-carbon systems across diverse regulatory and market environments.
The Chief Financial Officer of CIPA Holdings, Bright Yamoah, said credibility and discipline remained central to the Group’s approach.
“We combine strong governance and innovative financing with real local ownership,” he said.
He said CIPA’s experience across Ghana’s capital markets and advisory work across Africa had reinforced the importance of managing risk with purpose.
Experiences
Providing overarching institutional guidance, the President of CIPA Holdings, Allan Okomeng-Mensah, said he would leverage his four decades of experience in engineering and infrastructure across Ghana and Africa to strengthen the firm’s reputation for technical reliability, value-for-money delivery and corporate governance excellence.
He said CIPA was standing as a trusted institution capable of executing complex infrastructure projects at scale.
At the core of CIPA’s model is a governance-first architecture built on multidisciplinary expertise spanning infrastructure development, engineering, project management, financial structuring and sector-specific advisory.
This integrated platform allows CIPA to move seamlessly from concept development to project delivery, offering governments and investors a single, trusted institutional partner.
CIPA’s growing portfolio focuses on clean and reliable infrastructure, including solar power, battery energy storage systems, natural gas solutions and clean transportation infrastructure.
The Group also delivers projects across housing, public-sector infrastructure and renewable-powered digital systems, supporting essential services while aligning with climate goals.
Decarbonisation programme
In Ghana, CIPA is advancing an industrial and commercial decarbonisation programme designed around local-currency financing, addressing a long-standing constraint that has limited the scale of clean-energy adoption by local businesses.
The programme supports manufacturers, mining firms, agro-processors, logistics operators and large commercial facilities through hybrid energy systems, energy-efficiency upgrades and digital monitoring solutions.
As part of its clean-tech industrialisation agenda, CIPA is also establishing local assembly capacity for renewable-energy components. Its partnership with Canada’s Sparq Systems to assemble microinverters in Ghana reflects a broader strategy to localise clean-energy value chains and promote technology transfer.
Central pillar
Beyond infrastructure delivery, inclusion remains a central pillar of CIPA’s mission.
Through the CIPA Foundation, the Group integrates women’s economic empowerment, youth development, green jobs creation and climate resilience into its projects, ensuring social impact accompanies environmental gains.
Forbes Africa concluded that CIPA represents a new archetype of African institution—one that combines climate ambition with financial discipline and governance credibility.
