Efficient Appliances for People & the Planet

Menu

Enhancing the World Bank’s Energy Access Investments Through Energy Efficiency

The World Bank commissioned CLASP to take a fresh look at eight energy access operations and issue a report on how energy efficiency can help achieve better outcomes in access-related initiatives.

Download Report

Download Report

Fill out the form below to activate file downloads

This field is required

This field is required

Valid email address is required

You can now download the files related to this report above.

Currently, about 1.1 billion people globally don’t have access to electricity. That puts them at a significant economic and social disadvantage. Lack of electricity means children cannot study at home, productive hours for adults are cut short and women and children often cannot go out independently at night where there are no street lights.

Technology like solar home systems, small wind turbine systems and renewable mini- and micro-grids can help change that. On the supply side, greater energy efficiency means there is more electricity to deliver to a larger number of households and businesses. Besides being considerably more energy efficient than traditional fuels, it is also one of the best ways to take electricity supply to people who are not serviced by traditional grid supply. Such “off-grid” solutions can be cost-effective and reliable and serve as an intermediate solution for those waiting for grid-based electricity supply.

This new report entitled “EA + EE: Enhancing the World Bank’s Energy Access Investments Through Energy Efficiency,” identifies the nexus between energy efficiency and energy access. The report, which examined eight recent World Bank energy access projects, also recommends ways in which energy efficiency measures can amplify the impact of future projects that aim to achieve universal energy access.

The report recommends ways for the World Bank to maximize the impact of future energy access projects. Those include making energy efficiency a cornerstone of projects, communicating the benefits of the nexus between energy efficiency and energy access and setting tangible project indicators and targets and developing tools to help countries procure more energy efficient products.

The report also recommends rethinking subsidized energy tariffs, educating consumers on energy efficient behavior and prioritizing markets where market structure does not currently exist to take advantage of energy efficiency as part of energy access work.
The World Bank commissioned CLASP to take a fresh look at eight energy access operations and issue a report on how energy efficiency can help achieve better outcomes in access-related initiatives.

Source: The World Bank 

You may like this additional Clean Energy Access research

See All

close

Sign up for the CLASP newsletter

Close