Energy Access, Equity, and the Future of Electricity in India
Energy: Key Insights and Pathways
1. Why Energy Matters: Key Insights
- Energy powers progress, defines planetary boundaries, and reflects social priorities.
- Two-way relationship with development:
- Access to electricity improves income, education, health, and well-being.
- Development increases energy demand.
2. Energy Inequality in India: Data & Examples
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Energy Access Explorer (WRI): Reveals stark disparities in access.
- Example: Jharkhand – yellow dots = schools without electricity; green dots = health centers with regular power cuts.
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CEEW Report Findings:
- 44% of households are aware of solar heating systems (higher in urban areas).
- Only 1.1% own solar heating systems.
- 25% are aware of BEE (Bureau of Energy Efficiency) star ratings.
- Only 4.7% plan to buy solar heating systems.
- 47% have access to LPG cylinders → traditional fuels still widely used.
3. Electricity: The Backbone of the Economy
- Scale: Over 25 crore connections; 80% are domestic.
Challenges:
- Inefficiency: Utilities must generate 1500W to deliver 1000W to rural households (transmission losses).
- Financial Viability: Needs to recover ₹6/hour of use but often fails.
- Investment & Timeframes: Requires large capital and long-term planning; sector doubles every 10–15 years.
4. The Way Forward: Reimagining Energy Systems
- Cleaner Fuels: Transition to renewables (solar, wind) and cleaner options (LPG, biogas).
- Energy Efficiency: Promote BEE-rated appliances and solar technologies.
- Equity Focus: Ensure access for rural, low-income, and marginalized groups.
- Resilience & Fairness: Build systems that are environmentally sustainable and socially just.
5. Global Perspective: World Economic Forum
Today’s energy crisis is a generational opportunity to create:
- Cleaner energy systems
- Fairer access
- Greater resilience
Exam Tip
- Focus on the dual role of energy as both a driver of development and a source of inequality.
- Use data from CEEW and WRI to highlight disparities in access and awareness.
- Understand the inefficiencies in electricity transmission and the financial challenges faced by utilities.
- Emphasize solutions that combine:
- Renewable energy adoption
- Efficiency improvements
- Equitable policies
- Always link local examples (e.g., Jharkhand) to broader national and global energy transitions.
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