Kenya Institute for Public Policy Research and Analysis (KIPPRA)
Bio
Author Biography
Helen Hoka Osiolo works as a Policy Analyst at the Kenya Institute for Public Policy Research and Analysis (KIPPRA) and has over ten years’ experience in the energy sector. Currently, she is the acting Head of the Infrastructure and Economic Service Division in the institute. She is an economist with a focus on energy and the environment.
Institute of Development Studies
Bio
Author Biography
Ana has been working in the fields of energy and climate change policy for over a decade. Her research is concerned with inclusive green growth, particularly in the promotion of investments in clean energy that maximise poverty impacts. She is currently working on research projects dealing with pro-poor access to electricity, poverty impacts of minigrids in Africa, green growth diagnostics in Africa and the political economy of climate compatible development.
Kenya Institute for Public Policy Research and Analysis (KIPPRA).
Bio
Author Biography
James Gachanja is a Policy Analyst at the Kenya Institute for Public Policy Research and Analysis (KIPPRA), an autonomous thinktank that provides quality public policy advice to the Government of Kenya and other stakeholders.
Volume 48
Number 5-6
Published: December 5, 2017
Kenya has been hailed as a successful sub-Saharan African country in attracting private investment for renewable energy. However, energy poverty remains very high, with connectivity rates lower than the average for sub-Saharan Africa and poor quality of supply for those connected. Several constraints persist to achieve universal access to clean and affordable electricity: high system costs, including a deficient transmission and distribution infrastructure; low rural demand and inadequate planning to meet it; and local opposition to large renewable infrastructure. This article considers the political economy of these constraints, explaining how they arose, which policies can address them and which actors back or oppose these policies. The overarching message is that a prominent state role is required to fund the network components of the electricity system and to reach the less profitable segments of society, namely the rural poor. However, this clashes with a dominant private sector-led narrative in the international development community.
Keywords:
- Green Growth
- Electricity
- Power
- Energy