Government tenders demand proven performance. Tecmon delivers: trained engineers, eight-country operational experience, and on-the-ground expertise from Ouagadougou to Shanghai. We don’t just build power plants - we bridge global capital with African energy needs, ensuring projects meet international bankability standards while navigating local regulatory realities.
The Kossodo power plant plays a key role in reinforcing Burkina Faso’s electricity supply.
50 MWp
24/7 Uptime
Gabon
Dual-fuel reciprocating engine technology
Port-Gentil Power Plant
52.5 MW of reliable electricity, supporting Gabon’s expanding industrial and urban demand.
52.5 MWp
24/7 Uptime
Ivory Coast
Utility-Scale Solar
50 MW Grid-Connected
Park
The plant reduces greenhouse gas emissions and supports efforts to diversify the energy mix.
50 MWp
24/7 Uptime
Engineering
State-of-the-art solutions
Design & Planning
IFC-compliant feasibility studies, ETAP load flow modeling, and AutoCAD/PVsyst system design for thermal, solar, & hybrid installations.
System Integration
Grid code compliance engineering with proven substation integration across 33kV to 132kV networks in 8 African markets.
Advanced Metering
AMI deployment & SCADA integration for real-time monitoring, loss reduction, and revenue protection.
Renewable Projects
Utility-scale solar, HFO/diesel/gas thermal plants, and battery storage systems designed for African climate conditions and fuel availability.
Locations
We are active worldwide.
Headquartered in Burkina Faso, with engineering centers in Berlin and London, regulatory expertise across West Africa (Togo, Côte d’Ivoire, and the DRC), and strategic partnerships in China and Dubai, Tecmon operates at the intersection of local insight and global execution.
Each office integrates deep market knowledge with international EPC standards
A Global Leader in Innovative
Energy & Infrastructure
Founded in Burkina Faso and grown to 900+ MW across 8 countries, Tecmon Group is 100% African-owned and led by engineers who understand the realities of African infrastructure: inconsistent fuel supply, remote site access, regulatory complexity, and the need for bankable performance that survives tender scrutiny.