Abstract

Global progress towards Sustainable Development Goal 7.1: ‘By 2030, ensure universal access to affordable, reliable and modern energy services’ continues to be measured by mere access to energy carriers, using binary indicators that inadequately reflect the multi-dimensional nature of the goal. In this work, we describe and apply an alternative framework to track critical dimensions of energy provisioning and household capabilities that aligns more closely with the original SDG 7.1 target wording. We provide new empirical evidence from ten countries describing the extent to which the current indicators underestimate energy poverty and neglect decent access. We find that households officially counted as having access to modern energy sources, in many instances, still benefit only from minimal energy services, receive unreliable energy supply, and struggle with being able to afford energy services they need to enjoy a decent standard of living. We also find that poorer households are systematically over-represented in this population and are more likely to suffer multi-dimensional constraints when counted served by the current indicators. Notwithstanding challenges in data collection and standardisation, we argue that we must improve on binary indicators for measuring progress towards SDG 7.1, to pave the way for agenda setting and policy development that recognises and addresses broad inequities in household capabilities to use modern energy towards achieving a decent living standard.

Highlights

  • The United Nations 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda formally included energy among the seventeen Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in 2015 (UN 2015), following the recommendations of several high-level international bodies and global assessments (UNDP 2005, UNDP and WHO 2009, AGECC 2010)

  • The results of applying the alternative framework (AF) across ten countries surveyed under the World Bank MTF survey are depicted in figure 1, which compares measurement of progress towards SDG 7.1 using the current indicators against the AF

  • We include a separate visualisation of the affordability attribute for those households considered served by both SDG7.1.1 and SDG7.1.2 in the supplementary materials, as it is not possible to distinguish between these households and others in the visualisation shown here

Read more

Summary

August 2021

Affordable, reliable and modern energy services’ continues to be measured by mere access to energy carriers, using binary indicators that inadequately reflect the multi-dimensional nature of the goal. We describe and apply an alternative framework to track critical dimensions of energy provisioning and household capabilities that aligns more closely with the original SDG 7.1 target wording. We find that households officially counted as having access to modern energy sources, in many instances, still benefit only from minimal energy services, receive unreliable energy supply, and struggle with being able to afford energy services they need to enjoy a decent standard of living. Notwithstanding challenges in data collection and standardisation, we argue that we must improve on binary indicators for measuring progress towards SDG 7.1, to pave the way for agenda setting and policy development that recognises and addresses broad inequities in household capabilities to use modern energy towards achieving a decent living standard

Introduction
Methods and data
Access measurement comparing existing binary indicators with the AF
Inequities in access and associated factors
Findings
Discussion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call