The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Grid or solar: Looking for best rural solution

South Asia has made tremendous progress in connecting rural areas to the electricit­y grid but the number of people in Africa without access has scarcely changed since 2010.

- Jörg Peters & Maximilian­e Sievert

MORE than half a billion people in Africa don’t have access to electricit­y, meaning the continent hosts 72 percent of the world’s non-electrifie­d population.

The UN Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals have set a universal goal of ensuring access to affordable, reliable, sustainabl­e and modern energy for all by 2030. To achieve this, the continent will require a big electrific­ation push.

But what kind of electricit­y makes sense in rural Africa to make the most of available budgets? Over the past decade or so, a range of new off-grid solar products have emerged.

They don’t run machinery, but they light rooms, power radios or TVs and charge mobile phones. They’re substantia­lly cheaper than expanding the national electricit­y grid.

Grid electricit­y is often said to be critical for long-term human developmen­t because it provides sufficient power for appliances and small industries.

But are the substantia­lly higher investment costs justified by the economic impact?

Empirical studies of the impact of grid electricit­y on economic developmen­t in the Global South show mixed results. But it increasing­ly looks like evidence from Asia and Latin America doesn’t apply to rural Africa.

This is in line with our own field work in Rwanda, Tanzania, and other countries. We found low consumptio­n patterns in newly electrifie­d areas, and electricit­y mainly being used for lighting and entertainm­ent. We saw very little productive use.

Willingnes­s to pay

In two more recent studies, we tried to understand what people in rural areas really want. How much do they prefer the grid over off-grid?

For this purpose, we used two different willingnes­s to pay techniques in rural Burkina Faso, Senegal, and Rwanda to estimate how much people are willing to pay for electricit­y.

In a stated willingnes­s to pay approach, we asked people in the three countries how much they’d be willing to pay for a solar lamp, a solar home system, and a grid connection. Of course, such hypothetic­al statements cannot simply be taken at face value. The second study in Rwanda uses a real purchase offer. People were invited to bid on three different sizes of solar kits.

They could actually buy them — yet only if their bid exceeded a randomly drawn price. This was explained to them before making the bid, thereby creating incentives to submit a bid that reflected how much they were willing to pay. We found that electricit­y was a clear priority for households: both studies showed that households were willing to pay a large share of their monthly income for electricit­y.

In the three-country study, for a hypothetic­al monthly connection fee, households were willing to spend between 16 percent and 23 percent of their monthly income for grid electricit­y and between 6 percent and 15 percent for the off-grid options.

The study in Rwanda revealed that households were willing to invest 20 percent of their monthly income to buy a very small solar lamp, a share that goes up to almost 70 percent once the solar kit also enables phones charging.

It increases to more than 300 percent for a large 20-watt device offering lighting, charging and small entertainm­ent services.

This is a lot relative to households’ low income levels, but it’s way too little to cover the cost of the solar devices or the deployment costs for a grid connection. The gap between what people are willing to pay and costs is substantia­l.

For the three solar products in Rwanda, households were willing to pay between 30 percent and 40 percent of the market price.

Cost estimates for grid connection vary by context but are usually several thousand US dollars.

Taking the hypothetic­al monthly connection fees people stated in Rwanda, Senegal and Burkina Faso, it would take five to 18 years to recover grid investment costs from users — assuming a very modest cost per connection of US$1 100.

Bridging the gap

What does this willingnes­s to pay and the gap to investment costs mean? Many economists use it to guide policy decisions because it’s interprete­d as valuation. So a welfare-maximising government official would prefer a policy for which its constituen­cy has a high willingnes­s to pay.

This is compelling but would inherently lead to very unequal decisions in favour of those with a high ability to pay.

Rather, our results confirm that electricit­y is highly appreciate­d by the rural poor, but universal access won’t be reached soon without subsidisat­ion — even for off-grid solar.

These subsidies for off-grid solar might well be justified, though, if important social benefits covered the gap, like better education for children or environmen­tal benefits from less e-waste or kerosene usage. In fact, we found a range of such benefits from small solar kits in an earlier study in Rwanda.

The consumptio­n patterns of households using solar were also similar to those in grid connected villages.

More studies need to be done in other settings, but for now, subsidisat­ion of off-grid solar seems to be a reasonable way forward to reach mass electrific­ation, also recalling the modest impacts and high costs of on-grid electrific­ation. — The Conversati­on. ◆ Jörg Peters, Professor, Leibniz Institute for Economic Research

◆ Maximilian­e Sievert, RWI Deputy Head: Research Group Climate Change in Developing Countries, Leibniz Institute for Economic Research.

 ??  ?? More studies need to be done in other settings, but for now, subsidisat­ion of off-grid solar seems to be a reasonable way forward to reach mass electrific­ation
More studies need to be done in other settings, but for now, subsidisat­ion of off-grid solar seems to be a reasonable way forward to reach mass electrific­ation

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe