Measuring ‘Reasonably Reliable’ Access to Electricity Services
Table of Contents
Author(s)
By John Ayaburi, Morgan Brazilian, Jacob Kincer and Todd Moss
Abstract
While the electricity access rate is regularly measured in most countries, there are no routinely tracked metrics that measure reliability. This paper presents a new approach that: (1) aggregates all available country data on reliability; (2) defines a minimum threshold metric for ‘reasonable reliability’; and (3) estimates the number of people without ‘reasonably reliable’ electricity services. We estimate the number of people without access to reliable electricity is approximately 3.5 billion. This new metric provides a more granular view of the enormous energy access gap globally, and insights for future investment and policy decisions.
Read the full article at The Electricity Journal.