Residential Welfare-Loss from Electricity Supply Interruptions in South Africa: Cost-Benefit Analysis of Distributed Energy Resource Subsidy Programs

IF 1.8 4区 经济学 Q2 ECONOMICS Economics of Energy & Environmental Policy Pub Date : 2022-01-01 DOI:10.5547/2160-5890.11.1.rtot
Roberto V. Toto
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Sub-Saharan Africa has one of the highest population growth projections among major global regions but one of the lowest electrification rates. Only 47% of households access electricity, while the population is expected to double to 2.2 billion within 30 years. Without improvements, this would leave over 1 billion people in the region without electricity. Those countries that do have well-developed electrical grids still often face a second major obstacle: grid reliability. South Africa provides grid electricity to over 90% of residents, but—like many of its regional neighbors—suffers chronic electricity shortages. While households have access, they must live around shortages, which occur regularly and can last for hours. The costs of adjusting can be substantial, especially for low-income households that depend on electricity. Reliable electricity maintains good air quality, helps improve literacy rates, increases free time for household members to devote to leisure and productive activities, and prevents emergency expenditures during a shortage, among many other benefits. With each hour of outage, these benefits slip away. Distributed energy resources, or DERs, (e.g., solar panels and batteries) offer households a solution by providing off-grid electricity resources to temporarily bridge the gap in electricity supply during a grid shortage. Off-grid electricity resources have already grown rapidly as a cost-effective solution to electricity access and reliability in the Sub-Saharan region, and more growth is needed to help keep supply at pace with future population growth. More research is needed to understand the benefits of off-grid technologies and how to deploy them to households in an affordable and scalable way.
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南非居民福利——电力供应中断造成的损失:分布式能源补贴项目的成本效益分析
撒哈拉以南非洲是全球主要地区中人口增长预测最高的地区之一,但电气化率却最低。只有47%的家庭用上了电,而人口预计将在30年内翻一番,达到22亿。如果没有改善,这将使该地区超过10亿人没有电。那些拥有发达电网的国家仍然经常面临着第二个主要障碍:电网的可靠性。南非为90%以上的居民提供电网供电,但与许多地区邻国一样,长期电力短缺。虽然家庭可以使用,但他们必须生活在短缺的环境中,这种情况经常发生,可能持续数小时。调整成本可能很大,特别是对依赖电力的低收入家庭而言。可靠的电力维持良好的空气质量,有助于提高识字率,增加家庭成员用于休闲和生产活动的空闲时间,防止在短缺期间的紧急支出,以及其他许多好处。每中断一个小时,这些好处就会消失。分布式能源(DERs)(如太阳能电池板和电池)通过提供离网电力资源为家庭提供解决方案,在电网短缺期间暂时弥补电力供应缺口。在撒哈拉以南地区,离网电力资源作为一种具有成本效益的电力获取和可靠性解决方案已经迅速增长,而且需要更多的增长来帮助保持供应与未来人口增长的步伐。需要更多的研究来了解离网技术的好处,以及如何以负担得起和可扩展的方式将它们部署到家庭中。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
5.30%
发文量
22
期刊最新文献
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