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  • In 2012, the United Nations launched its worldwide effort to fight energy poverty , marking the

  • International Year of Sustainable Energy for All”. Energy poverty is considered a

  • lack of energy infrastructure and resources. Roughly one in seven people around the world

  • lack access to electricity, almost exclusively in developing countries. Although things are

  • improving, many have said that too little change is happening too slowly. So we wanted

  • to know, which countries don’t have electricity?

  • Well, it is estimated that anywhere from 1.1 to 1.3 billion people live without electric

  • power. To make up for a lack of deliverable energy, nearly 3 billion people around the

  • world use coal or wood fuel for heat and cooking, contributing to deadly pollution. This pollution

  • is thought to be responsible for more than 4 million deaths every year.

  • The overwhelming concentration of energy poverty is found in rural India and sub-Saharan Africa.

  • Over the past few years, India has dramatically improved its power infrastructure, and in

  • 2014, was the third largest electricity producer in the world. Yet, roughly 300 to 400 million

  • people without electricity live in rural Indian states. And even for those who do have power,

  • the energy grid is notoriously unreliable. In 2012, a nationwide blackout affected more

  • than 600 million people. Although the Indian government has launched efforts to provide

  • 24-hour power to the entire country, some have accused politicians of only directing

  • energy to politically important districts.

  • While India has made some progress, sub-Saharan Africa is still struggling. Altogether, Africa

  • has about twice as many people without power as Indiaroughly 600 million. The country

  • with the least access to electricity in the world is South Sudan, which also has one of

  • the lowest education and literacy rates. The World Bank notes that in 2012, only 5% of

  • the country’s 11-million-person population had electricity. In fact, across all of sub-Saharan

  • Africa only about a quarter of the population has access to electric energy. What’s worse

  • is that the lack of electricity means that power is considerably more expensive, with

  • electricity costing three time as much as it might in the rest of the developing world.

  • Additionally, on average, African manufacturers suffer nearly 2 monthsworth of power outages

  • a year, severely disrupting economic progress. In the past two decades, as energy dependence

  • has become increasingly important, Africa has only received about $600 million dollars

  • annually in energy assistance from foreign countries.

  • The UN’s Sustainable Energy Goals are focused on providing universal access to power and

  • clean fuel, doubling the amount of renewable energy, and doubling the rate of energy efficiency.

  • Efforts like President Barack Obama’s Power Africa initiative are focused on bringing

  • foreign advisors and financial help to figure out how best invest in Africa’s energy infrastructure.

  • Still, despite these efforts, the World Bank has said that there needs to be considerably

  • more sustained investment to even consider meeting those goals.

  • To see my recent report from Tanzania and the different ways in which the people there

  • are hacking the energy crisis, check out this video. An to learn more about energy poverty,

  • visit One.org/energy. Thanks for watching TestTube News! Be sure to subscribe for new

  • videos every day.

In 2012, the United Nations launched its worldwide effort to fight energy poverty , marking the

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