Decentralized Rural Electrification Project in Cameroon

Cameroon is a rural country. More than 70 percent of its people live in rural areas. In 1995, of 13,000 villages in Cameroon, only about 1,500 were connected to the national electricity grid. Most of Cameroon's 12.2 million inhabitants lack access to electricity. Only about 5 percent of all households have electricity. About 35 percent of urban households have electricity, but in rural areas this figure is less than 1 percent. Data are lacking on the number of rural clinics and schools with refrigeration and electricity or the number of villages with access to (electric) pumping facilities. The distribution of electricity in Cameroon is limited, and the growth of new subscribers is slow. New connections are only made in high load areas such as towns and industrial establishments, where grid extension is a cost-effective solution. But even in the peri-urban areas, thousands of consumers are not connected and use lead-acid batteries to run their televisions and lights. To extend the grid to rural areas would require a significant increase in investment just to keep up with population growth. Given the problems that the urban-based grid systems already experience, it is unlikely that most of the rural population and institutions, under current policies, will get electricity in the next 20-40 years.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC 2005-12
Subjects:ACCESS TO ELECTRICITY, ACID BATTERIES, AFFORDABLE CREDIT, APPROACH, BANKS, CLINICS, COLLABORATION, COMMERCIAL BANK, COMMUNITIES, CREDIT FACILITIES, CREDIT MECHANISMS, DECENTRALIZED RURAL ELECTRIFICATION, DIESEL, DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRICITY, DRY CELLS, ELECTRIC GENERATOR, ELECTRICAL PROJECT, ELECTRICAL SERVICES, ELECTRICITY, ELECTRICITY GRID, ELECTRIFICATION PROJECT, ENERGY POLICIES, FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE, GRID EXTENSION, GRID SYSTEMS, HOUSEHOLDS, INHABITANTS, INNOVATIONS, INSTALLMENTS, INTERNATIONAL BANK, OIL, PILOT PROJECTS, POWER, POWER COMPANY, PRIVATE ENTERPRISES, PROFITABLE BUSINESSES, REGULATORY FRAMEWORK, RENEWABLE ENERGY, RURAL AREAS, RURAL DEVELOPMENT, RURAL ELECTRIFICATION, SOLAR HOME SYSTEMS, START-UP, START-UP COSTS, SUPPLY OF ELECTRICITY, TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE, TECHNICAL SUPPORT, TOWNS, TURBINE, URBAN AREAS, VILLAGE, VILLAGES,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/12/10345703/decentralized-rural-electrification-project-cameroon
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/18061
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-okr-1098618061
record_format koha
spelling dig-okr-10986180612024-08-08T16:28:00Z Decentralized Rural Electrification Project in Cameroon World Bank ACCESS TO ELECTRICITY ACID BATTERIES AFFORDABLE CREDIT APPROACH BANKS CLINICS COLLABORATION COMMERCIAL BANK COMMUNITIES CREDIT FACILITIES CREDIT MECHANISMS DECENTRALIZED RURAL ELECTRIFICATION DIESEL DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRICITY DRY CELLS ELECTRIC GENERATOR ELECTRICAL PROJECT ELECTRICAL SERVICES ELECTRICITY ELECTRICITY GRID ELECTRIFICATION PROJECT ENERGY POLICIES FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE GRID EXTENSION GRID SYSTEMS HOUSEHOLDS INHABITANTS INNOVATIONS INSTALLMENTS INTERNATIONAL BANK OIL PILOT PROJECTS POWER POWER COMPANY PRIVATE ENTERPRISES PROFITABLE BUSINESSES REGULATORY FRAMEWORK RENEWABLE ENERGY RURAL AREAS RURAL DEVELOPMENT RURAL ELECTRIFICATION SOLAR HOME SYSTEMS START-UP START-UP COSTS SUPPLY OF ELECTRICITY TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TECHNICAL SUPPORT TOWNS TURBINE URBAN AREAS VILLAGE VILLAGES Cameroon is a rural country. More than 70 percent of its people live in rural areas. In 1995, of 13,000 villages in Cameroon, only about 1,500 were connected to the national electricity grid. Most of Cameroon's 12.2 million inhabitants lack access to electricity. Only about 5 percent of all households have electricity. About 35 percent of urban households have electricity, but in rural areas this figure is less than 1 percent. Data are lacking on the number of rural clinics and schools with refrigeration and electricity or the number of villages with access to (electric) pumping facilities. The distribution of electricity in Cameroon is limited, and the growth of new subscribers is slow. New connections are only made in high load areas such as towns and industrial establishments, where grid extension is a cost-effective solution. But even in the peri-urban areas, thousands of consumers are not connected and use lead-acid batteries to run their televisions and lights. To extend the grid to rural areas would require a significant increase in investment just to keep up with population growth. Given the problems that the urban-based grid systems already experience, it is unlikely that most of the rural population and institutions, under current policies, will get electricity in the next 20-40 years. 2014-04-25T18:13:56Z 2014-04-25T18:13:56Z 2005-12 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/12/10345703/decentralized-rural-electrification-project-cameroon https://hdl.handle.net/10986/18061 English en_US Energy Sector Management Assistance Program (ESMAP); CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ application/pdf text/plain Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
en_US
topic ACCESS TO ELECTRICITY
ACID BATTERIES
AFFORDABLE CREDIT
APPROACH
BANKS
CLINICS
COLLABORATION
COMMERCIAL BANK
COMMUNITIES
CREDIT FACILITIES
CREDIT MECHANISMS
DECENTRALIZED RURAL ELECTRIFICATION
DIESEL
DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRICITY
DRY CELLS
ELECTRIC GENERATOR
ELECTRICAL PROJECT
ELECTRICAL SERVICES
ELECTRICITY
ELECTRICITY GRID
ELECTRIFICATION PROJECT
ENERGY POLICIES
FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE
GRID EXTENSION
GRID SYSTEMS
HOUSEHOLDS
INHABITANTS
INNOVATIONS
INSTALLMENTS
INTERNATIONAL BANK
OIL
PILOT PROJECTS
POWER
POWER COMPANY
PRIVATE ENTERPRISES
PROFITABLE BUSINESSES
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
RENEWABLE ENERGY
RURAL AREAS
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
RURAL ELECTRIFICATION
SOLAR HOME SYSTEMS
START-UP
START-UP COSTS
SUPPLY OF ELECTRICITY
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
TECHNICAL SUPPORT
TOWNS
TURBINE
URBAN AREAS
VILLAGE
VILLAGES
ACCESS TO ELECTRICITY
ACID BATTERIES
AFFORDABLE CREDIT
APPROACH
BANKS
CLINICS
COLLABORATION
COMMERCIAL BANK
COMMUNITIES
CREDIT FACILITIES
CREDIT MECHANISMS
DECENTRALIZED RURAL ELECTRIFICATION
DIESEL
DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRICITY
DRY CELLS
ELECTRIC GENERATOR
ELECTRICAL PROJECT
ELECTRICAL SERVICES
ELECTRICITY
ELECTRICITY GRID
ELECTRIFICATION PROJECT
ENERGY POLICIES
FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE
GRID EXTENSION
GRID SYSTEMS
HOUSEHOLDS
INHABITANTS
INNOVATIONS
INSTALLMENTS
INTERNATIONAL BANK
OIL
PILOT PROJECTS
POWER
POWER COMPANY
PRIVATE ENTERPRISES
PROFITABLE BUSINESSES
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
RENEWABLE ENERGY
RURAL AREAS
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
RURAL ELECTRIFICATION
SOLAR HOME SYSTEMS
START-UP
START-UP COSTS
SUPPLY OF ELECTRICITY
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
TECHNICAL SUPPORT
TOWNS
TURBINE
URBAN AREAS
VILLAGE
VILLAGES
spellingShingle ACCESS TO ELECTRICITY
ACID BATTERIES
AFFORDABLE CREDIT
APPROACH
BANKS
CLINICS
COLLABORATION
COMMERCIAL BANK
COMMUNITIES
CREDIT FACILITIES
CREDIT MECHANISMS
DECENTRALIZED RURAL ELECTRIFICATION
DIESEL
DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRICITY
DRY CELLS
ELECTRIC GENERATOR
ELECTRICAL PROJECT
ELECTRICAL SERVICES
ELECTRICITY
ELECTRICITY GRID
ELECTRIFICATION PROJECT
ENERGY POLICIES
FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE
GRID EXTENSION
GRID SYSTEMS
HOUSEHOLDS
INHABITANTS
INNOVATIONS
INSTALLMENTS
INTERNATIONAL BANK
OIL
PILOT PROJECTS
POWER
POWER COMPANY
PRIVATE ENTERPRISES
PROFITABLE BUSINESSES
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
RENEWABLE ENERGY
RURAL AREAS
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
RURAL ELECTRIFICATION
SOLAR HOME SYSTEMS
START-UP
START-UP COSTS
SUPPLY OF ELECTRICITY
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
TECHNICAL SUPPORT
TOWNS
TURBINE
URBAN AREAS
VILLAGE
VILLAGES
ACCESS TO ELECTRICITY
ACID BATTERIES
AFFORDABLE CREDIT
APPROACH
BANKS
CLINICS
COLLABORATION
COMMERCIAL BANK
COMMUNITIES
CREDIT FACILITIES
CREDIT MECHANISMS
DECENTRALIZED RURAL ELECTRIFICATION
DIESEL
DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRICITY
DRY CELLS
ELECTRIC GENERATOR
ELECTRICAL PROJECT
ELECTRICAL SERVICES
ELECTRICITY
ELECTRICITY GRID
ELECTRIFICATION PROJECT
ENERGY POLICIES
FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE
GRID EXTENSION
GRID SYSTEMS
HOUSEHOLDS
INHABITANTS
INNOVATIONS
INSTALLMENTS
INTERNATIONAL BANK
OIL
PILOT PROJECTS
POWER
POWER COMPANY
PRIVATE ENTERPRISES
PROFITABLE BUSINESSES
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
RENEWABLE ENERGY
RURAL AREAS
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
RURAL ELECTRIFICATION
SOLAR HOME SYSTEMS
START-UP
START-UP COSTS
SUPPLY OF ELECTRICITY
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
TECHNICAL SUPPORT
TOWNS
TURBINE
URBAN AREAS
VILLAGE
VILLAGES
World Bank
Decentralized Rural Electrification Project in Cameroon
description Cameroon is a rural country. More than 70 percent of its people live in rural areas. In 1995, of 13,000 villages in Cameroon, only about 1,500 were connected to the national electricity grid. Most of Cameroon's 12.2 million inhabitants lack access to electricity. Only about 5 percent of all households have electricity. About 35 percent of urban households have electricity, but in rural areas this figure is less than 1 percent. Data are lacking on the number of rural clinics and schools with refrigeration and electricity or the number of villages with access to (electric) pumping facilities. The distribution of electricity in Cameroon is limited, and the growth of new subscribers is slow. New connections are only made in high load areas such as towns and industrial establishments, where grid extension is a cost-effective solution. But even in the peri-urban areas, thousands of consumers are not connected and use lead-acid batteries to run their televisions and lights. To extend the grid to rural areas would require a significant increase in investment just to keep up with population growth. Given the problems that the urban-based grid systems already experience, it is unlikely that most of the rural population and institutions, under current policies, will get electricity in the next 20-40 years.
topic_facet ACCESS TO ELECTRICITY
ACID BATTERIES
AFFORDABLE CREDIT
APPROACH
BANKS
CLINICS
COLLABORATION
COMMERCIAL BANK
COMMUNITIES
CREDIT FACILITIES
CREDIT MECHANISMS
DECENTRALIZED RURAL ELECTRIFICATION
DIESEL
DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRICITY
DRY CELLS
ELECTRIC GENERATOR
ELECTRICAL PROJECT
ELECTRICAL SERVICES
ELECTRICITY
ELECTRICITY GRID
ELECTRIFICATION PROJECT
ENERGY POLICIES
FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE
GRID EXTENSION
GRID SYSTEMS
HOUSEHOLDS
INHABITANTS
INNOVATIONS
INSTALLMENTS
INTERNATIONAL BANK
OIL
PILOT PROJECTS
POWER
POWER COMPANY
PRIVATE ENTERPRISES
PROFITABLE BUSINESSES
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
RENEWABLE ENERGY
RURAL AREAS
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
RURAL ELECTRIFICATION
SOLAR HOME SYSTEMS
START-UP
START-UP COSTS
SUPPLY OF ELECTRICITY
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
TECHNICAL SUPPORT
TOWNS
TURBINE
URBAN AREAS
VILLAGE
VILLAGES
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Decentralized Rural Electrification Project in Cameroon
title_short Decentralized Rural Electrification Project in Cameroon
title_full Decentralized Rural Electrification Project in Cameroon
title_fullStr Decentralized Rural Electrification Project in Cameroon
title_full_unstemmed Decentralized Rural Electrification Project in Cameroon
title_sort decentralized rural electrification project in cameroon
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 2005-12
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/12/10345703/decentralized-rural-electrification-project-cameroon
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/18061
work_keys_str_mv AT worldbank decentralizedruralelectrificationprojectincameroon
_version_ 1807157654781427712