The World Bank estimates that roughly 1.6 billion people?nearly one out of every four people on the planet?do not have regular access to electricity. This form of energy poverty disproportionately afflicts people living in developing countries. For example, in sub-Saharan Africa excluding South Africa, 75 percent of households, some 550 million people, have no access to network electricity. In South Asia, 700 million are similarly not connected to the electricity grid
Electricity is the mechanism that makes enter to the modern world possible and it is taken for gran...
Universal access to energy constitutes one of the biggest challenges that humanity has to face in th...
Nigeria, a country of 162.5 million people and the apparent giant of Africa, is also one of the worl...
The World Bank estimates that roughly 1.6 billion people?nearly one out of every four people on the ...
This edited volume constitutes the first authoritative resource documenting all aspects of energy po...
Despite the continuous efforts of developing countries and the international community to reduce ene...
In the vast continent with abundant indigenous energy sources and rapidly growing population, access...
Energy is indispensable to bringing off the growing human demand, and it is a challenging global iss...
Energy poverty is a significant development issue that is not univocally interpreted. In many parts ...
The Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 7 commits countries to ensure that people have access to affo...
Over a fifth of the world’s population, 1.4 billion people, lack access to electricity at home and t...
Power to the poorest / Werner Bergholz, Jacobs University, Bremen, Project Syndicate, 10/12/2013 htt...
Approximately 1.6 billion people worldwide do not have access to electricity, and roughly 2.4 billio...
Currently, 1.06 billion people still do not have access to electricity, with the majority living in ...
Lack of access to modern forms of energy hampers efforts to reduce poverty. The provision of electri...
Electricity is the mechanism that makes enter to the modern world possible and it is taken for gran...
Universal access to energy constitutes one of the biggest challenges that humanity has to face in th...
Nigeria, a country of 162.5 million people and the apparent giant of Africa, is also one of the worl...
The World Bank estimates that roughly 1.6 billion people?nearly one out of every four people on the ...
This edited volume constitutes the first authoritative resource documenting all aspects of energy po...
Despite the continuous efforts of developing countries and the international community to reduce ene...
In the vast continent with abundant indigenous energy sources and rapidly growing population, access...
Energy is indispensable to bringing off the growing human demand, and it is a challenging global iss...
Energy poverty is a significant development issue that is not univocally interpreted. In many parts ...
The Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 7 commits countries to ensure that people have access to affo...
Over a fifth of the world’s population, 1.4 billion people, lack access to electricity at home and t...
Power to the poorest / Werner Bergholz, Jacobs University, Bremen, Project Syndicate, 10/12/2013 htt...
Approximately 1.6 billion people worldwide do not have access to electricity, and roughly 2.4 billio...
Currently, 1.06 billion people still do not have access to electricity, with the majority living in ...
Lack of access to modern forms of energy hampers efforts to reduce poverty. The provision of electri...
Electricity is the mechanism that makes enter to the modern world possible and it is taken for gran...
Universal access to energy constitutes one of the biggest challenges that humanity has to face in th...
Nigeria, a country of 162.5 million people and the apparent giant of Africa, is also one of the worl...