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From Papua New Guinea to South Sudan

No plugs match

When travelling from Papua New Guinea to South Sudan: None of your Papua New Guinea plug types fit in South Sudan. You will need a travel adapter. Voltage is different (240V → 230V). Check your charger label; if it doesn’t list 230V you’ll also need a voltage converter. Frequency is the same at 50Hz.

Papua New GuineaPapua New Guinea
South SudanSouth Sudan

Your plugs

Plug I

Type I

No fit

Accepted in South Sudan

Plug C

Type C

Plug D

Type D

Plug G

Type G

0 of 1 plug type(s) match

You: I • South Sudan: C, D, G

No fit for: I

Voltage: 240V → 230V

Different voltage

You may need a voltage converter.

Frequency: 50Hz → 50Hz

Same frequency

You will need an adapter and likely a converter

Adapters you may need

Your plug shape does not fully match. Voltage differs; check for 100–240V support.

About electricity in South Sudan

South Sudan runs on 230V/50Hz with Type C, D, and G sockets.

SS

Grid & history

South Sudan has one of the lowest electrification rates in the world, most of the population has no grid access. Diesel generators and emerging solar mini-grids serve those that do.

Availability

Mostly off-grid. Juba and a few towns have intermittent grid supply.

Sockets & hotels

Mix of Type C, D, and G.

Energy mix

Renewables30%
Fossil70%

Mostly off-grid; mini-grid solar growing.

Practical tips

  • A universal adapter is essential because outlet types vary by building.
  • A high-capacity power bank is essential because outages are routine.
  • Voltage on generators can be unstable. Use a surge protector.

Need an adapter?

Find reliable travel adapters for SS on Amazon.

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