Electricity Access Still Insufficient in Developing Countries
Lack of access to electricity results in health, environmental, and livelihood challenges.
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Washington, D.C.----Despite
massive gains in global access to electricity over the last two
decades, governments and development organizations must continue to
invest in electrification to achieve critical health, environmental, and
livelihood outcomes, according to new research published by the
Worldwatch Institute for its Vital Signs Online publication.
Between
1990 and 2008, close to 2 billion people worldwide gained access to
electricity. But the International Energy Agency (IEA) estimates that
more than 1.3 billion people still lack access to electricity, while the
United Nations estimates that another 1 billion have unreliable access.
The UN General Assembly has designated 2012 as the "International Year
of Sustainable Energy for All," providing an opportunity to raise
awareness of the extent and impacts of the electrification challenge.
"Modern
energy sources provide people with lighting, heating, refrigeration,
cooking, water pumping, and other services that are essential for
reducing poverty, improving health and education, and increasing
incomes," write report authors Michael Renner and Matthew Lucky. "It will be difficult to
achieve a number of the UN's Millennium Development Goals without
improving energy access." Among the UN goals, targeted at 2015, are
combating HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases and eradicating poverty
and hunger.
At
least 2.7 billion people, and possibly more than 3 billion, lack access
to modern fuels for cooking and heating. They rely instead on
traditional biomass sources, such as firewood, charcoal, manure, and
crop residues, that can emit harmful indoor air pollutants when burned.
These pollutants cause nearly 2 million premature deaths worldwide each
year, an estimated 44 percent of them in children. Among adult deaths,
60 percent are women. Traditional energy usage also contributes to
environmental impacts including forest and woodland degradation, soil
erosion, and black carbon emissions that contribute to global climate
change.
Electrification
varies widely between rural and urban areas in developing countries. In
sub-Saharan Africa, the rural electrification rate is just 14 percent,
compared with 60 percent in urban areas.
"As new approaches to electrification evolve----ones that don't rely on expensive regional or national grids but rather a diversity of locally available energy resources----we
can begin to reach for the goal of access to electricity for all, rural
as well as urban," said Worldwatch President Robert Engelman. "But
access to electricity needs to be based wherever possible on low-carbon
energy, since we need to preserve a climate conducive to health and
well-being."
Improved
cook stoves can play an important role in reducing energy poverty,
enabling people to utilize more modern fuels or to use traditional fuels
more efficiently. Improved cook stoves can double or triple the
efficiency of traditional fuels, reducing indoor air pollutants.
Consuming less fuel also saves time and money, leaving people with more
disposable income and allowing them to invest more in their futures.
A
growing number of governments, international agencies, nongovernmental
organizations, and businesses are working to overcome energy poverty,
focusing in particular on the use of renewable energy sources such as
wind and solar. To date, 68 developing-country governments have adopted
formal targets for improving access to electricity; 17 countries have
targets for providing access to modern fuels, and 11 have targets for
providing access to improved cook stoves.
According
to the IEA, some US$1.9 billion was invested worldwide in 2009 in
extending access to modern energy services, such as electricity and
clean cooking facilities. The agency projects that between 2010 and
2030, an average of $14 billion will be spent annually, mostly on urban
grid connections. But this projected funding will likely still leave 1
billion people, largely those who live in the most remote areas of
developing countries, without electricity. Average annual investments
will need to rise to $48 billion to provide universal modern energy
access, the IEA reports.
Further highlights from the study:
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Notes to Journalists: For a complimentary copy of this trend, please contact Supriya Kumar at skumar@worldwatch.org.
About the Worldwatch Institute:
Worldwatch
is an independent research organization based in Washington, D.C. that
works on energy, resource, and environmental issues. The Institute's State of the World report is published annually in more than 20 languages. For more information, visit www.worldwatch.org.
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