Abstract

Nearly 1 billion people live without electricity at home. Energy poverty limits their ability to take autonomous actions to improve air circulation and the cooling of their homes. It is therefore important that electricity-access planners explicitly evaluate the current and future air circulation and cooling needs of energy-poor households, in addition to other basic energy needs. To address this issue, we combine climate, socio-economic, demographic and satellite data with scenario analysis to model spatially explicit estimates of potential cooling demand from households that currently lack access to electricity. We link these demand factors into a bottom-up electrification model for sub-Saharan Africa, the region with the world's highest concentration of energy poverty. Accounting for cooling needs on top of baseline household demand implies that the average electrification investment requirements grow robustly (a scenario mean of 65.5% more than when considering baseline household demand only), mostly due to the larger generation capacity needed. Future climate change could increase the investment requirements by an additional scenario mean of 4%. Moreover, the share of decentralised systems as the lowest-cost electrification option falls by a scenario mean 4.5 percentage points of all new connections. The crucial determinants for efficient investment pathways are the adoption and use of cooling appliances, the extent of climate change, and the baseline electricity demand. Our results call for a more explicit consideration of climate-adaptative energy needs by infrastructure planners in developing countries.

Highlights

  • About 800 million people (>10% of the global population) live without access to electricity at home (IEA et al, 2020)

  • In this paper we carried out a planning-oriented assessment of energy-poor households' exposure to thermal discomfort and heatrelated health threats in coming years

  • We considered an empirically grounded scenario and a set of archetypical, policy-descriptive scenarios to analyse the ramifications of expected income growth, climate change, and future adoption and use of cooling devices

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Summary

Introduction

About 800 million people (>10% of the global population) live without access to electricity at home (IEA et al, 2020). Energy poverty prevents households from meeting fundamental needs, such as taking actions to autonomously adapt to changing environmental conditions. A major adaptation action concerns indoor thermal discomfort mitigation. Anthropogenic climate change is projected to increase the absolute amount of heat in air, land, and water, and to skew its distribution over space and time. This will very likely boost the demand for ACC services (De Cian et al, 2019; van Ruijven et al, 2019), and increase the thermal discomfort exposure of energy poor households

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