Gender - brief actionable research agenda
Addressing gender dimensions of the low carbon transition is core to ensuring a gendered transformative change that is more equitable. Gender equity is thus part of a larger initiative to identify the most promising research issues to support an actionable low-carbon transition in the Global South.
Aim: To ensure that research in support of an inclusive global low-carbon transition (LCT) takes into account gender dimensions in order to promote gender equity.
Gender empowerment and energy access: evidence from seven countries
Gender equity is connected to modern energy services in many ways, but quantitative empirical work on these connections is limited. We examine the relationship between a multi-dimensional measure of women’s empowerment and access to improved cookstoves, clean fuels, and electricity. We use the World Bank Multi-Tier Framework survey datasets from seven countries that include almost 25 000 households in Africa and Asia.
Frameworks, methods and evidence connecting modern domestic energy services and gender empowerment
The world remains far from meeting Sustainable Development Goals 5 (gender equality) and 7 (universal access to modern energy). Energy access may empower women even as empowered women are more likely to adopt and use modern energy services. Such bidirectional linkages are underappreciated in the empirical literature, which typically estimates unidirectional relationships based on simple binary indicators.
Household electricity consumption inefficiency and poverty: Evidence from Ghana
Key Messages Improvements in household electricity consumption resulting from efficiency improvements have the potential to reduce household electricity expenditure, and consequently the level of poverty among households. However, little is known about the extent to which improvement in electricity consumption efficiency can reduce poverty. Our study finds that: |
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