ABSTRACT
Several hundred million people in sub-Saharan Africa are at risk of being without access to electricity by 2030 despite the ongoing work aimed at achieving the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goal 7—sustainable energy for all. Based on qualitative interviews, quantitative surveys, observation, and participation in Kenya and Senegal between 2010 and 2018, the author aims to explain why the rate of progress is slower than intended. The findings highlight three strong hindrances: lack of affordability due to extreme poverty, mismatch between the village-level outreach of grid-based electricity systems and the geography of settlements, and lack of consideration given to gender inequality. The findings also provide new insights into the ways that decentralized small-scale solar power increasingly meets some of the shortcomings of centralized grids in addressing these three issues, even in rural areas where grids are already present. The author concludes that the ways in which village communities have combined the use of solar-powered energy with grid-supplied energy indicates the importance of the former and the need to intensify efforts to improve solar power delivery models and integrate them fully in energy sector strategies.
Acknowledgements
The EFEWEE project was funded by DFID through the ENERGIA program and led by the University of Oslo (Centre for Development and Environment, SUM). The Solar xChange and Solar Transitions projects were funded by the Research Council of Norway and led by the University of Oslo (Department of Sociology and Human Geography). I am grateful to my co-researchers in these three projects for their joint work. I also appreciate the useful comments from two anonymous reviewers, the guest editor of this special issue, and the journal’s editor-in-chief. Kristian Stokke and Mari Espelund are thanked for preparing .
Notes
1 For comprehensive analyses and explanations of the underlying reasons for the mentioned features and challenges relating to decentralized solar PV in off-grid, small-scale delivery models, see Ulsrud et al. Citation2015; Citation2017; Citation2018; Citation2019.
2 For an explanation of such intra-household decision-making, see Winther et al. Citation2018.