Innovative business models for the scale-up of energy access efforts for the poorest
Hisham Zerriffi, Liu Faculty, UBC
September 1, 2011
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Source: Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability, Volume 3, Issue 4, September 2011, Pages 272-278
Despite years of effort primarily by governments and donors the ability of large portions of the world’s population to access modern and efficient energy services remains out of reach. Roughly 1.5 billion people live without access to electricity and 2.5 billion rely on biomass for their primary cooking fuel, often using highly inefficient and polluting cookstoves. Scaling up the effort to solve this energy-poverty problem requires innovation in service delivery which includes possible changes in both ownership of energy service delivery organizations and the ways in which energy is financed. This paper reviews options for innovative business models to scale up energy access and, in particular, focuses on both producer and consumer-side financing options that can ensure sustainability of energy access efforts.