In rural areas of developing countries, the distinction of
electricity markets and low-temperature markets is not yet helpful. In
the absence of grid electricity, a wide variety of energy technologies
and sources is used for services such as
lighting or driving appliances, which in urban areas are entirely served by electricity. Traditional fuels like fuel wood, charcoal and a number of
agricultural residues are still the dominant energy source in the rural
and peri-urban energy supply of developing countries. As these fuels are
-
at least in principle - renewable energy sources, they are today still
the quantitatively most important renewable energy technology (RET). The
REN21
Global Status Reports dedicate a specific section to this technologically
heterogeneous field, which constitutes a major development challenge.
For areas out of reach of grid electricity, a specific energy
policy is required. The low quality of the energy services in rural and peri-urban areas
automatically limits the quality of other technical and social
infrastructure. Therefore, the energy issue is closely related to the
poverty issue which the Millennium Development Goals (MDG) seek to
reduce significantly. There are calls, sustained by the
Millennium Project, of including energy supply objectives to the
MDGs. Currently, the objective of giving access to modern energy is
the consensus objective, because modern forms of energy, such as electricity
and gas, can significantly improve the quality and opportunities of life
in these areas. At the same time, traditional fuel use has to be
rendered sustainable and benign to people's health. Rural
energy policies need to consider the rural energy needs in an integrated
manner.
The REN21 issue
paper Energy for Development
illustrates with many case studies the important role of RET in meeting
the MDGs. Improved biomass cook
stoves, biogas, biomass gasification and electricity in mini or
stand-alone systems, based on small hydropower, wind, PV and hybrid supply are the RETs to
be expanded, making use of local resources in terms of energy, intelligence,
and labour. Cost, subsidy and institutional issues are as difficult as necessary to
be solved. They are, however, not specific to RET, but to all rural energy
programmes. Financing from internal sources, public-private partnerships, and
international finance institutions is available, incremental
cost financing from the Global Environment Facility (GEF). Technical support is offered
through bilateral cooperation.
The Global Network on Energy for Sustainable
Development (GNESD) has recently published another experience-based
report filled with insights on the question of poverty reduction:
Can
Renewable Energy Make a Real Contribution? For rural
electrification in mini-grids or stand-alone systems, the World Bank has assembled her experience in the
RE
Tool Kit.