An action agenda for Africa’s electricity sector
To meet the development needs of a growing population, Africa’s electricity sector requires a major transformation.
Despite important changes over the past decade, efforts to expand and modernize the sector need to be redoubled. Indeed, current electrification rates, generation-capacity levels, and security-of-supply indicators underscore that much is yet to be accomplished.
A new policy article, published today in Science, identifies five sets of complementary actions to put Africa’s electricity sector on track to sharply increase electrification rates and secure long-term access to affordable and cleaner energy.
Read the article with open access here.
"Africa’s development needs are as diverse as the countries in the continent. Yet, none of those needs will be met unless a reliable supply of affordable electricity, generated through clean fuels, is available to all. In this article, we describe five no-regrets actions to transform Africa’s electricity sector" says lead-author Daniel Puig, who works for the Technical University of Denmark’s Department of Technology, Management and Economics. He is a senior advisor at UNEP DTU Partnership.
These are the five recommendations made in the article:
- Introduction of a combination of supply-side incentives and demand-side subsidies, to help expand electricity markets.
- Digitalization of energy sector planning and management tools, to help deliver energy at the right time, in the right place, at the lowest cost.
- Integration of local-content requirements in renewable-energy policies, to capture employment benefits and ensure that state-of-the-art technologies are fully adopted by African countries.
- Strengthening and expansion of regional power pools through African-led international partnerships, to expand electricity access and reduce electricity bills.
- Expansion of investments in off-grid and interconnected clean-energy mini-grids, to account for the different socio-economic realities across urban, peri-urban and rural areas.