Benin

Solar panels installed in a rural West African setting for an article about Benin solar energy

Benin bets on solar to end its dependence on imported electricity by 2030

Benin solar energy policy marks a significant turning point for West Africa, as the country has formally committed to making solar photovoltaics its primary electricity source by 2030. For years, Benin depended heavily on power imports from neighboring nations, leaving households and businesses vulnerable to supply disruptions and price volatility. The new strategy pursues both utility-scale solar farms and off-grid rural installations, extending reliable electricity to communities that centralized infrastructure has never consistently served. The commitment aligns with UN Sustainable Development Goal 7 and positions Benin to attract international climate finance at a moment when clean energy investment is accelerating across the continent.

Hand holding a vial and syringe, for article on malaria vaccine rollout

Twelve African countries will receive 18 million doses of the first-ever malaria vaccine

Malaria vaccines are heading to twelve African countries for the first time, with 18 million doses of RTS,S/AS01 set to roll out between 2023 and 2025. Nine nations are introducing the shot into routine childhood immunization, joining Ghana, Kenya, and Malawi, where more than 1.7 million children have already been vaccinated since 2019. The pilot countries have seen severe malaria cases and child deaths decline, and families are showing up eager for their children to be protected. After a century of scientific struggle against one of humanity’s deadliest diseases, this rollout marks a turning point — proof that patient global collaboration can deliver lifesaving tools to the children who need them most.

The Kingdom of Dahomey around 1894, for article on kingdom of Dahomey

The Kingdom of Dahomey rises as a powerful West African state in Benin

The Kingdom of Dahomey took shape around 1600 on the Abomey Plateau in present-day Benin, growing from a small inland polity into one of West Africa’s most organized states. Under King Agaja, it fielded a standing army of roughly 10,000 and reached the Atlantic coast by 1727. Its legacy — including Vodun traditions still practiced across the diaspora — remains morally complex and deeply studied.