4.5 Article

The Power of Electricity: How Effective Is It in Promoting Sustainable Development in Rural Off-Grid Islands in the Philippines?

Journal

ENERGIES
Volume 14, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/en14092705

Keywords

rural electrification; electricity access; sustainable development assessment; energy trilemma; multi-tier framework

Categories

Funding

  1. Engineering Research and Development for Technology (ERDT) under the Philippine Department of Science and Technology (DOST)

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Electrification plays a crucial role in the advancement of rural communities, but assessing its impact on sustainable development at the grassroots level remains a challenge. A framework with eight indicators in economic, technical, social, and environmental dimensions is presented to evaluate how electrification affects sustainable development. Results from two islands in the Philippines show that islands with limited hours for electricity access rarely experience positive impacts to socioeconomic development, while islands with longer access see improvements in almost all aspects. This framework can be a useful tool for decision- and policy-makers to assess electrification in rural off-grid communities and assist in achieving sustainable development.
Electrification plays a crucial role in the advancement of rural communities but establishing its impact to the communities' sustainable development remains a challenge. This paper presents a pragmatic framework for assessing how electrification affects sustainable development at the grassroots level with eight indicators in the economic, technical, social, and environmental dimensions highlighted. An exploratory factor analysis approach is applied to determine how these dimensions contribute to the community's overall sustainable development. The framework is applied in two islands in the Philippines of less than 500 households and varying electrification levels. Results indicate that Gilutongan Island, which has less than 24-h electricity access rarely find productive uses of electricity and still make use of conventional fuels for lighting. Meanwhile, Cobrador Island, which has 24-h access see improvements in almost all aspects, although they are slightly burdened by the unaffordability of tariffs. This means that islands with limited hours for electricity access rarely experience positive impacts to their socioeconomic development while the opposite is true for islands with longer access. The framework can be a useful tool for decision- and policy-makers to assess electrification in rural off-grid communities and to streamline efforts in helping these communities achieve sustainable development.

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