The Tracking SDG 7 :
The Energy Progress Report 2022 was released which showed that the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the pandemic crisis have considerably slowed down efforts toward straining the Seventh Sustainable Development Goal ( SDG 7 ) target.
Access to Electricity (7.1):
The share of the global population with access to clean cooking fuels and technologies rose to 69% in 2020, an increase of 3% points over the last year 2021. However, population growth outpaced much of the gains in access, particularly in Sub-Saharan Africa.
As a result, the total number of people lacking access to clean cooking has remained relatively stagnant for decades. The increase was primarily driven by advancements in access to large, populous countries in Asia.
While the share of renewable capacity expansion rose by a record amount in 2021, the positive global and regional trajectories mask the fact that countries, where new capacity additions lagged, were those most in need of increased access.
Moreover, rising commodity, energy, and shipping prices, as well as restrictive trade measures, have increased the cost of producing and transporting solar photovoltaic (PV) modules, wind turbines, and biofuels, adding uncertainty for future renewable energy projects.
SDG 7.3 aims to double the global rate of annual improvement in primary energy intensity—the amount of energy used per unit of wealth created—to 2.6% in 2010–30 versus 1990–2010.
From 2010 to 2019, global annual improvements in energy intensity averaged around 1.9%, well below the target.
International public financial flows to developing countries in support of clean energy decreased for the second year in a row, falling to USD 10.9 billion in 2019, despite the immense need for sustainable development in most countries and the growing urgency of climate change.
Overall, the level of financing remains below what is needed to reach SDG 7, particularly in the most vulnerable and least developed countries.
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