For the past decade, the narrative of African tech has been dominated by “asset-light” software and fintech. Investors have relentlessly hunted for the next neobank or payment gateway, prioritizing fast-scaling transaction models. However, as 2026 begins, a strategic shift is occurring. The next wave of billion-dollar exits is likely to emerge not from shiny apps, but from “boring” climate infrastructure—the physical systems that keep lights on and food cold.
The End of the Diesel Era
In Nigeria, the real regulator of economic life isn’t the Central Bank; it is the price of petrol and the reliability of the power grid. For years, businesses and households have operated under a “generator tax,” spending millions to bypass the failures of the national grid. With Nigeria’s generator market projected to reach over $800 million by 2030, the demand for alternatives has reached a breaking point.
This is where the “diesel killers” come in. A new generation of startups is moving beyond mere software to build the physical backbone of the economy. These companies are focused on cold-chain infrastructure and modular battery storage, treating energy not as a side benefit but as a core utility.
Cooling as Core Infrastructure
One of the most promising sectors for acquisition is the cold chain. Startups like Koolboks, ColdHubs, and SolarFreeze are revolutionizing how food and medicines are stored in off-grid and weak-grid communities. By deploying thousands of solar-powered refrigeration units, they are preventing post-harvest losses and ensuring vaccine stability without relying on expensive, polluting diesel.
These companies are increasingly moving toward local assembly in Nigeria, a strategy that signals their transition from “impact projects” to serious infrastructure plays. This shift is attracting a different class of buyers. While traditional VCs often shy away from hardware-heavy models, infrastructure investors and global utilities are paying attention.
The New Buyer Profile
The exit landscape for African tech is maturing. Global utilities like Engie have already demonstrated their appetite for this market by acquiring off-grid solar companies like Mobisol. Simultaneously, telecom giants like Airtel are aggressively rolling out solar and battery systems across hundreds of sites to slash operational costs.
According to Ndubisi Ugonabo, an expert on Nigerian climate tech, these hardware-heavy models require a different mindset. Founders must think like infrastructure operators rather than typical startup founders. This means navigating complex logistics, managing hardware warehouses, and utilizing “blended capital”—a mix of equity, grants, and concessional debt from development finance institutions.
Building for Resilience
Specialized funds, such as EchoVC’s climate-tech vehicle, are now writing checks for these resilient models. Because Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) metrics are now a global standard, companies that can prove their impact through carbon reduction and food security are finding access to cheaper capital.
The next wave of success in Africa will be quiet. It won’t be defined by the loud marketing of a consumer app, but by the steady hum of a cold room that never loses power. As industrial groups look to lock in low-cost energy and logistics platforms consolidate into national networks, the “boring” world of climate infrastructure is set to provide the most exciting exits of the decade.




