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Chapter 23 - Policies for Energy Access

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 September 2012

Daniel H. Bouille
Affiliation:
Bariloche Foundation
Hugo Altomonte
Affiliation:
Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean
Douglas F. Barnes
Affiliation:
Energy for Development
Touria Dafrallah
Affiliation:
Environment and Development Action in the Third World
Hu Gao
Affiliation:
Energy Research Institute
Hector Pistonesi
Affiliation:
Bariloche Foundation
Ram M. Shrestha
Affiliation:
Asian Institute of Technology
Eugene Visagie
Affiliation:
University of Cape Town
Jean Acquatella
Affiliation:
Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean
Suani T. Coelho
Affiliation:
Brazilian Reference Center on Biomass
Sivanappan Kumar
Affiliation:
Asian Institute of Technology
Debajit Palit
Affiliation:
The Energy and Resources Institute
Gisela Prasad
Affiliation:
University of Cape Town
Leena Srivastava
Affiliation:
The Energy and Resources Institute
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Summary

Executive Summary

A number of factors contribute to the lack of access to modern forms of energy. They include low income levels, unequal income distribution, inequitable distribution of modern forms of energy, a lack of financial resources to build the necessary infrastructure, weak institutional and legal frameworks, and a lack of political commitment to the scaling up of services. An absence of specific policies oriented to poverty alleviation often explains inequitable economic growth and, consequently, inequality in access to and use of energy. In recent years, several developing countries have defined targets aimed at improving access to electricity, but many developing countries still have no modern forms of energy access targets in place that address meeting basic energy services, including modern fuels for cooking and mechanical power.

As Chapter 2 argues, developing countries require adequate access to modern energy, especially among the poor, in order to meet the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) as well as their own national development objectives. In line with GEA objectives, Chapter 17 pathways are designed to describe transformative changes toward a more sustainable future. A specific feature of the GEA energy transition pathways is that they simultaneously achieve normative goals related to all major energy challenges, including environmental impacts of energy conversion and use, as well as energy security and energy access. ‘Energy access’ refers to those challenges clearly described in Chapter 19, which will be addressed in this chapter.

Affordable and sustainable universal access to modern forms of energy depends on the evolution of income level and income distribution.

Type
Chapter
Information
Global Energy Assessment
Toward a Sustainable Future
, pp. 1603 - 1664
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2012

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