How To Electrify The Global South

How to Electrify the Global South

Solar panels at a farm in Bhaloji village, Rajasthan, India, installed by farmer and doctor Amit Singh, illustrating India’s push toward renewable energy ahead of COP26. Sajjad Hussain/AFP via Getty Images

Abba AliyuManoj Sinha, and Woochong Um

Rather than rely on incremental efforts or one-size-fits-all models, countries hoping to achieve rapid progress on electrification must integrate distributed and centralized systems, make the most of AI-enabled tools, and send credible signals that attract private capital. India and Nigeria have shown how this can be done.

Other countries with financially stressed grids, including India, are studying this model, while pursuing innovative solutions of their own. For example, India launched a scheme in 2024 to install rooftop solar systems on ten million homes, and now requires that systems be integrated into local grids.

Image for Out Now: Watch the latest Insider Interview with Daron Acemoglu and Michael J. Sandel

Out Now: Watch the latest Insider Interview with Daron Acemoglu and Michael J. Sandel

In a new Insider Interview, produced in partnership with the Berggruen Institute, Daron Acemoglu and Michael J. Sandel examine the dark side of meritocracy, the limits of markets, the meaning of freedom, and tech companies’ tightening grip on the public sphere.

Read & Watch Now

The second key lesson is that countries should embrace digital and AI-enabled tools. While much attention has focused on the environmental issues AI raises, the technology has also emerged as a powerful solution for enhancing energy access and sustainability. Thanks to AI and virtualized grid management, it is now possible to operate complex, distributed systems at a scale that would have been unimaginable just a few years ago.

The Indian state of Rajasthan is learning this firsthand. Under the Global Energy Alliance’s India Grids of the Future Accelerator, which is investing $25 million to support utilities in modernizing their grids, the state has built a digital “twin” of Jaipur’s electricity grid and is harnessing AI to deliver real-time insights. The data will be used to assess grid health and identify opportunities for optimization, including in how to integrate renewables and battery storage. This initiative, which appears set to deliver more reliable energy access to up to 18 million mostly rural people, could serve as a model for global data-driven utility management.

A third lesson is that energy access delivers the greatest economic and social returns when governments and utilities work with actors across sectors to ensure that they have the tools, training, and financing to use it effectively. In Nigeria, initiatives the Energizing Agriculture Program and the Energizing Education Program provide farms, schools, and teaching hospitals access to clean energy and the capabilities needed to use it to increase productivity and improve services.

India’s Pradhan Mantri Kisan Urja Suraksha evam Utthaan Mahabhiyan scheme promotes solar-energy adoption in agriculture, thereby boosting farmers’ incomes and energy security, while reducing emissions. Launched in 2019, PM-KUSUM has already led to the solarization of over two million irrigation pumps, which previously used diesel, improving the livelihoods of more than 600,000 farmers.

The final critical lesson is that emerging economies can overcome elevated risk perceptions and mobilize private capital, including from foreign investors. The key is to strengthen policy frameworks, deliver clear market signals, promote proven business models, and highlight early success stories.

The introduction of ambitious, time-bound national targets with transparent tracking mobilizes private capital and keeps entrepreneurs engaged. This was the case in India, where the government’s plan for electrifying every household, announced in 2017, led to robust investment in modernizing the existing grid and expanding mini-grids, thereby delivering energy to unserved and underserved areas.

Africa appears to be taking this lesson to heart. So far, 29 of the continent’s governments have committed to connect 300 million people to reliable power by 2030. By submitting National Energy Compacts with time-bound targets to the World Bank and the African Development Bank, these countries have signaled to investors that they are ready and willing to scale up investment in energy infrastructure. Nigeria alone has mobilized over a billion dollars to expand energy access.

To be sure, new markets always call for bold early investors. But supportive policy frameworks, together with pilot projects providing proof of concept and catalytic and concessional finance that helps to de-risk investments, can attract the pioneers new markets need.

Nigeria’s interconnected mini-grid project is a case in point. It began with only four grids serving around 6,000 homes and businesses – just enough to make the technological and business case for the initiative. Add to that World Bank funding, and the project pipeline quickly began filling up. The country now expects the initiative to attract hundreds of millions of dollars in private investment.

If countries hope to achieve rapid progress on electrification, they should take these lessons to heart. Rather than rely on incremental efforts or one-size-fits-all models, they must integrate distributed and centralized systems, make the most of AI-enabled tools, and send credible signals that entice private capital. India and Nigeria have shown what is possible. Others should their lead.

Featured

  1. A Stronger Work Ethic Won’t Fix Advanced Economies

    Mar 6, 2026 Jun Du

  2. The Long Road to War with Iran

    Mar 4, 2026 Carla Norrlöf

  3. Magical Thinking Won’t Make Europe an AI Power

    Mar 3, 2026 Cristina Caffarra

  4. Can the US Afford Trump’s Iran War?

    Mar 9, 2026 Desmond Lachman

  5. Iran’s Energy-Warfare Strategy

    Mar 6, 2026 Avri Schechter

https://prosyn.org/a7VRzx5

It appears that you have not yet updated your first and last name. If you would to update your name, please do so here.

Please wait, fetching the form

Please wait, fetching the form

Please wait, fetching the form

Please wait, fetching the form

Please wait, fetching the form

Please wait, fetching the form

Please wait, fetching the form

Sumber Artikel:

Project-syndicate.org

Baca Artikel Lengkap di Sumber

Patinko

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *