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Monday, May 27, 2019
WB: Kenya to miss 2020 electricity access deadline
Moses Omusolo
Kenya could miss its target of achieving universal electricity access by
next year but is on course to meet the global target ahead of 2030,
according to the World Bank.
The World Bank says in a new report that although the country has in
the last decade made major progress in connecting its citizens to the
electricity grid as well as other off-grid power systems, 2020 might
come too soon to achieve universal connectivity.
The global lender, however, expects the country to achieve this before 2030.
The report also notes that electricity access rate in Kenya is the
highest in East Africa, with the country also way ahead of other
countries on the continent.
“Ghana and Kenya stand out as successes and are projected to achieve
universal access before 2030, but progress in the region is highly
uneven,” reads the World Bank’s Tracking SDG7: The Energy Progress
Report.
Electricity access in Kenya has grown largely due to the implementation
of the Last Mile Connectivity Project. The project was launched in 2015
and was aimed at scaling up connectivity in rural and peri-urban areas
through subsidised connections. This has resulted in a surge in the
number of power consumers.
According to electricity distributor Kenya Power, national electricity
access from both grid and off-grid solution as of the end of June last
year had risen to 73 per cent compared to 29 per cent five years
earlier.
The World Bank report, which tracks global progress on the three
targets of SDG7—access to energy and clean cooking, renewable energy and
energy efficiency—shows that despite the progress, millions more will
be left without electricity access by 2030.
“Global electrification rate reached 89 per cent; the number of people
without electricity access dropped to around 840 billion, compared to
one billion in 2016 and 1.2 billion in 2010,” it reads in part.
It adds that most third-world countries have made significant progress.
“Among countries with the largest population without access to
electricity, Bangladesh, Kenya, Myanmar, and Sudan have made the most
progress,” says the report.
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