The mobile phone revolution is allowing countries to skip landlines, prompting many observers to assume countries might also skip building an electricity grid and jump right to distributed home energy systems (e.g., here and here). New disruptive technologies are exciting and alluring, especially in sub-Saharan markets where the unmet infrastructure needs are huge. After all, if you can charge your smartphone with a rooftop solar kit, then who needs power plants and a grid?
The US International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) is considering a change to its current ban on financing projects with…
The debate over which countries should pursue nuclear energy is timely because the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation…
The historic cold snap that led to widespread power outages across Texas was tragic and continues to be…
It’s easy to feel daunted by the overlapping (and overwhelming) challenges of simultaneously ending energy poverty and tackling…
On April 22nd, the Biden administration released its Climate Finance Plan, which aims to scale-up financial resources to…
The US International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) is the $60 billion agency that’s supposed to catalyze investment to…
How can international donors better support Africa’s transition to a prosperous low-carbon energy future? And when should donors…
Europe’s energy crisis is aggravating a decades-old tension between the developed and the developing world. As wealthy countries…