Data InsightsThe global number of people without electricity has halved since 2000, but it has increased in Sub-Saharan Africa

The global number of people without electricity has halved since 2000, but it has increased in Sub-Saharan Africa

Stacked area chart of the number of people without electricity by world region from 2000 to 2023, where the global total has roughly halved since 2000 but the population without electricity has increased in Sub-Saharan Africa while declining in most other regions. Data source: compiled from multiple sources by the World Bank; License: CC BY.

Most people in the world would think very little before flicking on the lights, charging a mobile phone or turning on a laptop to read this.

But that’s a very different reality from the almost 700 million people in the world who have no access to electricity. While this number is large, it has halved this century, falling from 1.35 billion to 675 million. You can see this in the chart.

However, this progress has been far from even. The number has fallen across all regions except Sub-Saharan Africa, where it has increased.

That doesn’t mean no progress has been made: the share of people in Sub-Saharan Africa with electricity has doubled, rising from 26% to 53%. But population growth has outpaced this expansion, meaning the number of people without electricity has still risen.

Billions of people have access to far less electricity than is needed to run AC for just one hour a day, as I explored in a recent article.

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