Energy

Access to universal and sustainable electricity: Meeting the challenge

SDG 7 aims to ensure access to affordable, reliable, and sustainable energy for all. Globally, about 90 percent of people across the world had access to electricity in 2020—but in some countries the access rate was as low as 19 percent or even lower.

As shown in the above chart, progress towards achieving universal access to electricity (SDG indicator 7.1.1) has been slow over the last 20 years. The share of the global population with access to electricity increased from 78 percent in 2000 to 91 percent in 2020. Based on current trends, this figure is expected to rise only marginally from 91 percent in 2020 to 92 percent by 2030.

South Asia drove most of the gains in the last two decades, rising from 56 percent in 2000 to 96 percent in 2020. Sub-Saharan Africa has also made progress, with electricity access rising from 25 percent in 2000 to 48 percent in 2020. One out of two people in Sub-Saharan Africa lacked access to electricity in 2020, and access in this region would need to more than double by 2030 to meet SDG target 7.1.

Closing the urban-rural gap in low- and lower-middle-income countries, particularly in Sub-Saharan Africa, is key to achieving this target. There is a stark divide in global access to electricity between urban and rural areas. In 2020, 733 million people worldwide lacked access to electricity. Around 80 percent of those lived in rural areas.

This is most evident in Sub-Saharan Africa, where almost 60 percent of people live in rural communities. In this region, the proportion of residents with electricity was 28 percent in rural areas compared to 78 percent in urban areas in 2020. Overall, in Sub-Saharan Africa, approximately 476 million rural residents lack access to electricity.

Explore how stark this urban-rural divide in access to electricity is across the globe through this data visualization of the 2023 Atlas of Sustainable Development Goals.

To learn more about where we stand in our efforts to ensure access to affordable, reliable, and sustainable energy for all, and how this affects greenhouse gas emissions, look at the data stories and visualizations of the seventh story of the Atlas.

Source : World Bank

GLOBAL BUSINESS AND FINANCE MAGAZINE

Recent Posts

How new technologies travel: Evidence from global firm networks

Frontier innovation may start at home, but new technologies tend to spread across borders through…

2 days ago

Bank failures: The roles of solvency and liquidity

Do banks fail because of runs or because they become insolvent? Answering this question is…

2 days ago

Rapid technology creation widened inequality across time and space

The US college wage premium nearly doubled between 1980 and 2010, rising fastest in dense…

2 days ago

The European Union’s external imbalances: past, future and policy

Europe’s rising external surplus now rivals China’s, reflecting weak investment and growing surpluses, pointing to…

2 days ago

EU aid for domestic revenue mobilisation after the Sevilla Commitment

The 2025 Sevilla Commitment renews the push for domestic revenue mobilisation, with the EU needing…

2 days ago

The new global imbalances: why care, why now and what should be done?

This essay analyses the causes of, and remedies for, external imbalances, and what countries should…

4 days ago