NEW YORK: The world is falling behind in achieving the Sustainable Development Goal for energy (SDG7), with progress on basic energy access reversing for the first time in a decade in 2022, according to a UN report.


AI Brief
  • About 2.1 billion people still lack access to clean cooking fuels and technologies, contributing to significant health and environmental issues.
  • Projections estimate 660 million people will still lack electricity and 1.8 billion will lack clean cooking technologies by 2030.
  • The report calls for increased international financial, technological, and policy support to address the energy access deficit and to ensure accelerated deployment of renewable energy and improved energy efficiency.


The report, released on Wednesday by the International Energy Agency, the International Renewable Energy Agency, the UN Statistics Division, the World Bank, and the World Health Organisation, reveals that the global energy access gap is worsening as population growth outpaces new connections, reported Xinhua.

The report warns that current efforts are not enough to achieve SDG7 on time.

It confirms that the number of people without access to electricity increased for the first time in over a decade, as the population grew at a higher rate than that of new electricity connections, leaving 685 million people without electricity in 2022, 10 million more than in 2021.

Meanwhile, 2.1 billion people still lived without access to clean cooking fuels and technologies, with the number remaining largely flat last year. This carries with it huge implications for health, gender equality, and the environment, contributing to 3.2 million premature deaths each year, says the report.

Other parts of the SDG7 agenda have fared better recently. Renewable energy has seen robust growth over the past two years, and energy efficiency improvements are gradually improving after a drop-off during the pandemic, according to the report.

It estimates that, under current policies, there will be 660 million people lacking electricity access and around 1.8 billion without access to clean cooking technologies and fuels by 2030. Progress in energy efficiency rates also lags, well below the level needed to reach the SDG7 target.

The authors of the report urge the international community to refocus efforts on providing the required financial, technological, and policy support to close the access deficit and ensure that all countries and communities can benefit from accelerated renewable energy deployment and improved energy efficiency.

--BERNAMA-XINHUA