UNECA Reports on Energy Access and Security in Eastern Africa

10 June 2014, IISD news - The UN Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA) has launched a  report detailing the state of energy access and security in 14 Eastern African  countries. The report finds that Eastern Africa's population has one of the  lowest electricity access rates in the world, ranging from 1% in the State of  South Sudan (9.3 million people without access) to 22.5% in Ethiopia (nearly  64.5 million without access).

The report, titled 'Energy Access and Security in Eastern Africa - Status and  Enhancement Pathways,' uses various assessment methodologies and case studies of  Ethiopia, Tanzania, South Sudan and Uganda to give an overall picture of energy  access and security in the region. It finds that traditional biomass remains a  primary source of energy, resulting in forest stock reductions of almost 40% in  Burundi and Uganda, 20% in Ethiopia, Somalia and Tanzania, and 4-8% in the  Democratic Republic of the Congo, Eritrea, Kenya and Madagascar since 1990.

While consumption levels of petroleum have increased by 63% in the last ten  years, the region's refining capacity has decreased, leaving it almost entirely  dependent on imported refined petroleum. The import of oil is a growing share of  countries' gross domestic product (GDP) and diverts resources from development,  according to the report.

Launching the report in Kigali, Rwanda, Yohannes Hailu, UNECA Economic  Affairs Officer in Charge of Energy, commented on ways to increase energy  security in the region, saying that "[c]ountries in the region which have the  capacity to generate more power, given their energy resource potential, should  increasingly look at regional energy trade opportunities that would mutually  benefit all the economies of the region."

In addition to increasing regional energy trade, the report recommends, inter alia: undertaking greater transboundary and multilateral  cooperation on water resources to support the development of the energy sector;  using a combination of "coherent, consistent and conducive" policy and  regulatory frameworks that are adapted to local conditions to encourage the  deployment of renewable energy; and greater South-South collaboration, and in  partnership with countries with strong energy innovation systems, on science and  technology with the aim of enhancing indigenous energy technology capacity.

Source:  http://forests-l.iisd.org/news/uneca-reports-on-energy-access-and-security-in-eastern-africa/