Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
995948 Energy Policy 2011 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

Accelerating development in Sub-Saharan Africa will require massive expansion of access to electricity—currently reaching only about one third of households. This paper explores how essential economic development might be reconciled with the need to keep carbon emissions in check. We develop a geographically explicit framework and use spatial modeling and cost estimates from recent engineering studies to determine where stand-alone renewable energy generation is a cost effective alternative to centralized grid supply. Our results suggest that decentralized renewable energy will likely play an important role in expanding rural energy access. However, it will be the lowest cost option for a minority of households in Africa, even when likely cost reductions over the next 20 years are considered. Decentralized renewables are competitive mostly in remote and rural areas, while grid connected supply dominates denser areas where the majority of households reside. These findings underscore the need to decarbonize the fuel mix for centralized power generation as it expands in Africa.

Research highlights►► Expansion of electricity access in Sub-Saharan Africa remains a development priority. ► Low carbon options are important to reduce GHG emissions growth and avoid lock-ins. ► Spatially explicit cost modeling guides choice of supply options. ► Decentralized renewables are lowest cost for a significant minority of households. ► Grid supply remains attractive, suggesting focus on decarbonizing centralized supply.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Energy Engineering and Power Technology
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