Empowering Tomorrow: The Journey Toward Affordable and Clean Energy
Energy is the silent pulse of modern civilization. It powers our hospitals, lights our classrooms, and fuels the digital world that connects us. However, as of 2026, the global community faces a dual challenge: expanding energy access to the millions still living in "energy poverty" while rapidly transitioning away from the fossil fuels driving climate change.
Sustainable Development Goal 7 (SDG 7) serves as our global compass, aiming to ensure access to affordable, reliable, sustainable, and modern energy for all (Mirzabaev & Chen, n.d.).
The Current Landscape: Progress and Gaps
While significant strides have been made, the journey is far from over. Global access to electricity reached 92% in 2023, an increase of 8 percentage points since 2010 (MDPI, 2024).
The Electricity Deficit: Approximately 645 million people are projected to remain without electricity by 2030, with 85% of that deficit concentrated in Sub-Saharan Africa (MDPI, 2024).
The Cooking Crisis: 2.1 billion people still rely on polluting fuels like firewood and charcoal for cooking, which causes severe respiratory health issues and environmental degradation (Muigua, 2021; MDPI, 2024).
Why "Affordable" Matters
The transition to clean energy isn't just a technical challenge; it's an economic one. In many developing regions, "energy poverty" forces households to use dirty fuels because they are perceived as cheaper in the short term (INOMICS, 2024).
Research suggests that as household wages rise, there is a natural transition toward cleaner fuels—a concept known as the energy ladder hypothesis (INOMICS, 2024).
Solutions for a Sustainable Future
Achieving SDG 7 requires a multi-pronged approach involving innovation, policy, and community action:
Renewable Integration: Renewable energy is now the fastest-growing energy source globally. It is predicted that by the end of 2025, renewables will overtake coal as the primary source of global electricity (MDPI, 2024).
Digital Governance: Implementing digital public services and e-governance has shown a statistically positive impact on extending clean energy access by improving transparency and resource management (MDPI, 2022).
Local Innovation: Projects like solar-hybrid systems and decentralized microgrids are proving essential for reaching remote rural communities that the national grid cannot easily serve (DukeSpace, 2018).
Conclusion: A Shared Responsibility
Affordable and clean energy is a "cross-cutting" goal.
The shift to a green economy is not just an environmental necessity—it is the greatest opportunity of the 21st century to create a more equitable world.
References
DukeSpace. (2018). Developing Clean Energy in Nigeria: Data-Centric Solutions for a Solar-Hybrid Company.
INOMICS. (2024). Sustainability May Be Bolstered By Income: Household Cooking Fuel Choice in a Developing Country.
MDPI. (2022). Clean and Affordable Energy within Sustainable Development Goals: The Role of Governance Digitalization.
MDPI. (2024). Progress Towards Affordable and Clean Energy: A Comparative Analysis of SDG7 Implementation.
Mirzabaev, A., & Chen, Q. (n.d.). Sustainable Development Goal 7: Affordable and clean energy. IDEAS/RePEc.
Muigua, K. (2021). Delivering Clean and Affordable Energy for All.
OurEnergyPolicy. (2010). Creating a Clean Energy Century.

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