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“We found that while progress with
electrification between 2014 and 2018 varied
across nations, disparities were even more
pronounced at a sub-national provincial level,”
she explains.
The detailed dataset revealed issues that
would have been hidden in coarser, country-
level data, potentially allowing policymakers to
take steps to solve a problem that until recently,
they may not have even been able to identify.
“A big challenge with a lot of planning that's
happening right now, is the fact that people
have a very limited understanding of what
demand is and how it is changing over time,”
says Pachauri.
LOCAL SOLUTIONS FOR ENERGY AND
SUSTAINABILITY
IIASA researchers are also applying their research
to find practical solutions that can be put into
practice in specific places.
For example, the Hindu Kush Himalaya — a
majestic region of high mountains that reaches
into eight countries, Afghanistan, Bangladesh,
Bhutan, China, India, Myanmar, Nepal, and
Pakistan — is one of the many areas on the
planet that is especially burdened by energy
poverty. Four hundred million people there still
lack access to basic electricity, and 80% of the
rural population cook their meals over fires.
IIASA researcher Pallav Purohit — who grew
up there — wondered why, in a region rich with water and potential hydropower resources,
energy access remains such a challenge. In a
recent analysis with scientists from seven other
countries, Purohit analyzed the energy outlook
of the Hindu Kush Himalayas from a broad
perspective, including supply and demand,
policies, institutions, opportunities, and potential
transformational pathways for sustainable
energy. They found that a narrow focus on one
piece of the puzzle may have limited progress
more broadly.
“Existing national policy frameworks primarily
focus on electrification for household lighting,
with limited attention paid to energy
for clean cooking and heating,
while productive energy use
promotion has remained a
neglected area in historical
development practice. As a
result, there has been limited
progress in access to energy for
clean cooking compared to the
progress in electricity access in all
the Himalaya countries,” says Purohit.
Pachauri points to a similar challenge in
other developing countries, where development
finance has focused on small off-grid solar
panels that can provide enough energy to, for
instance, charge a cell phone, but not enough
to run an air conditioner or heat a stove.
“We need to think more long-term, about
building infrastructure that will provide people
with the energy they need to have decent living
conditions,” she says.
While the challenges remain daunting, IIASA
researchers see reason for optimism.
“As long as you're thinking of climate policy
as removed from development policy from
development objectives, you're never going to
achieve what you want — they have to go hand
in hand,” says Pachauri. “Compared to ten years
ago, however, the issues of equity and justice,
poverty eradication, development, and how
those link to climate are now center stage. I
think that's really thanks to a lot of the work
that we have done here at IIASA.”
Further info:
Dhakal S, Srivastava L,
Sharma B, Palit D, Mainali B,
Nepal R, Purohit P,
Goswami A, et al. (2019).
Meeting Future Energy
Needs in the Hindu Kush
Himalaya. In: The Hindu
Kush Himalaya Assessment.
pp. 167-207 Cham,
Switzerland: Springer.
[pure.iiasa.ac.at/15666]
Falchetta G, Pachauri S,
Parkinson S, & Byers E
(2019). A high-resolution
gridded dataset to assess
electrification in sub-
Saharan Africa. Scientific
Data 6 (1): art. 110.
[pure.iiasa.ac.at/15982]
Mastrucci A, Byers E,
Pachauri S, & Rao N (2019).
Improving the SDG energy
poverty targets: residential
cooling needs in the Global
South. Energy and
Buildings 186: 405-415.
[pure.iiasa.ac.at/15739]
van Ruijven B, De Cian E,
& Sue Wing I (2019).
Amplification of future
energy demand growth due
to climate change. Nature
Communications 10 (1)
[pure.iiasa.ac.at/15966]
Shonali Pachauri:
pachauri@iiasa.ac.at
Alessio Mastrucci:
mastrucc@iiasa.ac.at
Pallav Purohit:
purohit@iiasa.ac.at By Katherine Leitzell
11Optionswww.iiasa.ac.at
Winter 2019/20
zurĂĽck zum
Buch options, Band winter 2019"
options
Band winter 2019
- Titel
- options
- Band
- winter 2019
- Ort
- Laxenburg
- Datum
- 2019
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 32
- Kategorien
- Zeitschriften Options Magazine