The gloom and doom surrounding energy poverty

Energy security is always high on the agenda of both consumers and producers but rarely does the international debate focus on those hundreds of millions of people without any access to modern energy. Authoritative studies suggest that, even in 2030, there will be 1.3 billion people without electric...

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Main Author: Al-Herbish, S
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Oxford Institute for Energy Studies 2010
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author Al-Herbish, S
author_facet Al-Herbish, S
author_sort Al-Herbish, S
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description Energy security is always high on the agenda of both consumers and producers but rarely does the international debate focus on those hundreds of millions of people without any access to modern energy. Authoritative studies suggest that, even in 2030, there will be 1.3 billion people without electricity: this figure is only 200 million below today’s estimate, meaning that increased power generation capacity worldwide is expected only to nearly offset the additional needs created by an increasing population. Despite the genuine gains in development in many parts of the world, ‘business as usual’ policies will merely condemn many of the poorest to life without clean and efficient energy services. Such services are essential to advance human development and provide opportunities for economic and social progress. We, the OPEC Fund for International Development (OFID), certainly believe that the international community can do better than this.
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spelling oxford-uuid:81fe7b7a-7c2f-4db5-9b9d-1f7e64ee2ae62022-03-26T21:34:07ZThe gloom and doom surrounding energy povertyJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:81fe7b7a-7c2f-4db5-9b9d-1f7e64ee2ae6EnglishOxford University Research Archive - ValetOxford Institute for Energy Studies2010Al-Herbish, SEnergy security is always high on the agenda of both consumers and producers but rarely does the international debate focus on those hundreds of millions of people without any access to modern energy. Authoritative studies suggest that, even in 2030, there will be 1.3 billion people without electricity: this figure is only 200 million below today’s estimate, meaning that increased power generation capacity worldwide is expected only to nearly offset the additional needs created by an increasing population. Despite the genuine gains in development in many parts of the world, ‘business as usual’ policies will merely condemn many of the poorest to life without clean and efficient energy services. Such services are essential to advance human development and provide opportunities for economic and social progress. We, the OPEC Fund for International Development (OFID), certainly believe that the international community can do better than this.
spellingShingle Al-Herbish, S
The gloom and doom surrounding energy poverty
title The gloom and doom surrounding energy poverty
title_full The gloom and doom surrounding energy poverty
title_fullStr The gloom and doom surrounding energy poverty
title_full_unstemmed The gloom and doom surrounding energy poverty
title_short The gloom and doom surrounding energy poverty
title_sort gloom and doom surrounding energy poverty
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