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The Data-Driven Electrification in Africa Programme is supported by

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  • USAID

    USAID leads international development and humanitarian efforts to save lives, reduce poverty, strengthen democratic governance and help people progress beyond assistance.

    Read more
  • Power Africa

    Power Africa brings together technical and legal experts, the private sector, and governments from around the world to work in partnership to increase the number of people with access to power.

    Read more

Universal energy access is one of the main driving forces in alleviating poverty and ensuring sustainable and inclusive economic growth

The energy access sector is undergoing deep transformations as it strives to eliminate energy poverty, but there is a pressing need to equip governments with more actionable and targeted tools for integrated electricity planning. These resources are crucial to maximize the effectiveness of both centralised and decentralised solutions, leveraging off-grid initiatives led by the private sector, such as the deployment of mini-grids and stand-alone home solar systems.

These off-grid solutions are essential to provide access to electricity and advance efforts to reach universal energy access by 2030 and the Sustainable Development Goals. Power Africa is drawing on the IEA’s expertise to support governments with data-driven insights as they develop improved programs and policies that aim to accelerate electricity access. The grant envisaged an approach aiming to:

  • Improve coverage and quality of electricity access data and
  • Make state-of the art geospatial modelling and data more actionable for countries to develop electricity access policies that leverage both centralised and decentralised energy solutions.

Improving electricity access data in sub-Saharan Africa

In an effort to drive more informed, focused and impactful policy programs, the IEA has worked to refine and improve electricity access data by providing more robust, standardised and comprehensive data collection guidelines. The IEA has been monitoring global energy statistics and tracking global electricity access data since 2000. Currently, we estimate 600 million people in Africa lack reliable electricity access. Although steady progress has been made to reduce this number, the Covid-19 pandemic and the 2022 energy crisis reversed this trend. Timely and comprehensive indicators of electricity access are crucial for policy makers to plan and adjust universal electrification efforts. Therefore, to accelerate and strengthen these efforts, the IEA has published the Guidebook for Improved Electricity Access Statistics outlining a unified strategy for developing electricity access indicators.

This Guidebook provides key recommendations for leveraging both supply- and demand-side data sources and covers all steps in the process, including data collection, validation, processing and dissemination. It addresses the most significant barriers countries face in tracking access and proposes best practices to overcome these challenges. Notably, this Guidebook details a methodology for estimating new access from stand-alone power systems, which are becoming more common in electrification efforts, using sales and distribution data as well as methods to adjust for product lifetimes, use, and resale. The Guidebook also highlights strategies for developing electricity access information systems that geospatially disaggregate data, which is a critical step towards integrating geographic information systems (GIS) into electrification planning protocols. Ultimately, the Guidebook aims to improve the quality, granularity, availability, comparability and standardisation of electricity access indicators.

Identifying unserved buildings and estimating their demand by satellite

Enhancing geospatial analysis for defining pathways to universal electricity access by distribution mode and fuel

The IEA has sought to provide improved geospatial tools for integrated electrification planning that encompass residential as well as commercial and industrial energy demand. These tools contribute to improved electricity planning capacities at the government level and enable decision makers to craft more impactful policies to deliver the best route to universal access. They include:

  • The GIS Catalogue for Energy Planning in Africa, a web-based platform that provides stakeholders involved in energy planning with access to a collection of geospatial datasets that detail the distribution of population, renewable energy resources, energy system infrastructure, and key end-users across Africa as well as a collection of non-geospatial datasets that detail population growth rates, regulatory indicators, utility performance, and power market characteristics.
  • The Open Energy Maps Model, an open-source GIS tool, developed in collaboration with the MIT Energy Initiative, designed to estimate and forecast electricity demand at the building-level in developing countries. This tool leverages a machine learning model trained on geo-referenced data of electricity consumption sourced from utility meters in 3 pilot countries—Ghana, Senegal and Uganda—to predict electricity demand for buildings that lack meter data or have yet to be electrified with high resolution and high accuracy. 

The Data-Driven Electrification in Africa Programme is supported by

  • USAID

    USAID leads international development and humanitarian efforts to save lives, reduce poverty, strengthen democratic governance and help people progress beyond assistance.

    Read more
  • Power Africa

    Power Africa brings together technical and legal experts, the private sector, and governments from around the world to work in partnership to increase the number of people with access to power.

    Read more