4.7 Article

Energy poverty in Sri Lanka

期刊

ENERGY ECONOMICS
卷 101, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.eneco.2021.105450

关键词

Energy poverty; Multidimensional poverty; Inequality; Principle component analysis; Socio-economic determinants; Household survey; Sri Lanka

资金

  1. Sustainable Energy Policy Cluster (SEPC) of the Department of Accounting, Finance and Economics, Griffith University
  2. Asia Pacific College of Business and Law, Charles Darwin University

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The study explores energy poverty in Sri Lanka using the Multidimensional Energy Poverty Index (MEPI), finding that households in Sri Lanka are experiencing a moderate level of energy poverty on average, with the lack of access to modern cooking fuel being the largest contributor. Significant differences in energy poverty were observed by gender, age, ethnicity, income group, and sub-national location of the household.
Understanding energy poverty is fundamental to any efforts to alleviate it. This paper, using the latest (2016) Sri Lankan Household Income and Expenditure survey data, examines the incidence, intensity, inequality, and determinants of energy poverty in Sri Lanka, by constructing the Multidimensional Energy Poverty Index (MEPI). The MEPI is calculated using a set of seven key indicators representing multiple dimensions of energy and assigning weights by using the Principal Component Analysis (PCA). Sri Lankan households, on average, are experiencing a moderate level of energy poverty (with MEPI of 0.431) where the lack of access to modern cooking fuel is the largest contributor to energy poverty. Results of this study revealed notable differences in energy poverty by gender, age, ethnicity, and income group of the head of the household and by sub-national location of the household. Significant differences in inequality in energy poverty were also observed by sub national location and income. While energy-poor households are not necessarily always income-poor, income and other socio-demographic and geographical factors are strongly associated with energy poverty in Sri Lanka. The findings of this study raise alarms for the possible adverse implications on health and education attainment of the energy-poor. Overall, the results provide valuable policy insights into one of the most neglected dimensions of the post-war development policy agenda in Sri Lanka, in particular, and other developing countries, in general.

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