Public Forum: Energy access, affordability and efficiency in Kenya
About 80 percent of Kenya’s population is dependent on biomass, especially wood and charcoal, for basic energy needs. However, discussion about energy in Kenya is dominated by petroleum and electricity generation.
Charcoal, firewood and waste are easily accessible energy sources for many, both cheaper and more reliable than modern alternatives. 1 This comes with unsafe, unhealthy, and damaging effects on people and the environment. Can we create safe and renewable biomass systems that are environmentally sound? Or should we be building new energy systems that don't rely on biomass.
According to World Bank, 63.8 percent of the Kenyan population had access to electricity in 2017. But how is access defined? Is it simply a near transmission line or is the electricity also connected to households and affordable? There are ambitious government efforts to increase connectivity through the county wide Last Mile Connectivity Program (LMCP), leading to universal access to electricity by 2020. These efforts target low-income households in the rural areas and informal urban settlements. But does connectively automatically translate to affordability, use and therefore energy access?
The new Pay-As-You-Go Solar systems seem to provide energy access and affordability solutions for many Kenyans who cannot access electricity through the national grid. These systems provide households with solar kits on credit with small regular payments. This model is described as cost-effective and able to solve the country’s electricity crisis, while bringing millions into the financial system. Others, however, label these schemes as opportunities for solar companies to make profit off poor Africans by increasing personal indebtedness. But what are the real benefits of the various Pay-As-You-Go energy models, and who are the real winners and losers?
A reliable source of safe and affordable energy is needed to improve people’s lives, strengthen the economy and allow the land to regenerate, but many barriers still hinder an inclusive, gender-just and sustainable energy future for all Kenyans. This Public Energy Forum brought together experts at the Kenya National Theatre on 22 October 2019 to highlight the issues around energy access, efficiency and affordability in Kenya in the form of a panel discussion moderated by Arthur Muliro, Deputy Managing Director at Society for International Development.
The Society for International Development, in partnership of the Heinrich Boll Foundation and Strathmore Energy Research Centre, invites the public to register and the attend the upcoming hybrid Public Energy Futures Forum, under the theme, 'Nuclear Power Development in Kenya – A Low Carbon Solution or a High-Risk Gamble?' On Tuesday 3, December 2024, 1400 to 1700hrs (EAT Nairobi) at Daystar University, Nairobi Campus.
Join the conversations and insights from the panel of speakers at the continental agency level as we review negotiations of the Pact for the Future and map how those align with the aspirations of the AU Agenda 2063; and contribute to our mapping of what Africa’s future might look like post-Summit of the Future.
On Wednesday 21 August 2024 the Society for International Development (SID), in partnership with Heinrich Boll Foundation, through the Sustainable Energy Futures Project (SEF) hold a virtual Public Energy Futures Forum under the theme: Unpacking Clean Cooking Developments in Kenya - Challenges and opportunities.
On Monday 22 July 2024, SID, in partnership with Heinrich Boll Foundation, hosted the Sustainable Energy Futures Project public virtual workshop under the theme ‘Energy Policy & Dilemmas of a Just Transition'.