Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

Bridging the urban energy divide: equity-focused transition pathways for sub-Saharan African cities

This thesis examines how alternative urban energy transition pathways in Sub-Saharan Africa could simultaneously address the imperatives of equitable energy access and use across different income groups, while meeting other development and sustainability goals. Through detailed analysis of six citie...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Yongoua Nana, Joel
Other Authors: Winkler, Harald
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Eng
Published: Department of Chemical Engineering 2025
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867613271618486272
access_status_str Open Access
author Yongoua Nana, Joel
author2 Winkler, Harald
author_browse Winkler, Harald
Yongoua Nana, Joel
author_facet Winkler, Harald
Yongoua Nana, Joel
author_sort Yongoua Nana, Joel
collection Thesis
dc_rights_str_mv http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
description This thesis examines how alternative urban energy transition pathways in Sub-Saharan Africa could simultaneously address the imperatives of equitable energy access and use across different income groups, while meeting other development and sustainability goals. Through detailed analysis of six cities - ranging from metropolitan centres to smaller towns - the research provides new insights into the patterns and drivers of energy inequalities in African urban contexts. The study makes several contributions to knowledge. First, it presents the first comprehensive, multi-city analysis of urban energy consumption and emissions across key economic sectors in African cities. Key findings highlight that urban energy profiles in Sub-Saharan Africa exhibit far greater heterogeneity than often recognized. Results from the scenario analysis also showed that this heterogeneity results in varied equity outcomes even when the study cities were subjected to the same policy interventions, therefore demanding more context-specific approaches to urban energy policy design. The research also identifies electricity use as uniquely significant among energy carriers, showing both the strongest correlation with GDP and typically the most unevenly distributed across household quintiles. Second, the thesis makes relevant methodological contributions through the development and implementation of the Urban Household Energy Model (UHEM), a transparent bottom-up modelling framework custom-designed to analyse household energy inequalities in African urban contexts. Through extended application of the Gini coefficient and Lorenz curve to previously inaccessible municipal datasets, the research provides new evidence that household energy use inequalities consistently show significantly lower magnitudes than income inequalities, suggesting that energy's status as a fundamental need creates a "floor effect" in consumption patterns. This, however, does not extend to electricity use, which shows markedly higher inequalities, in some cases even exceeding income inequality. Third, the research advances both scholarly understanding and practical policy development through its assessment of energy transition policies. Analysis of current policy commitments (Stated Energy Policies Scenario - STEPS) reveals that despite often lacking clearly actionable measures on equity, these interventions could achieve meaningful reductions in household energy use inequalities, with clean cooking and electricity access interventions typically the most powerful levers for reducing household energy inequalities. The research further examines two alternative scenarios - Blues and Harmony - specifically designed through an equity lens. The Blues scenario, emphasizing bottom-up, community-driven approaches, demonstrated more significant outcomes across most metrics, achieving substantially greater reductions in household energy use inequality than STEPS and Harmony across several study cities. However, the findings have revealed a non-linear relationship between clean energy access and inequality reduction, suggesting diminishing returns beyond certain thresholds of clean energy adoption in advancing equity goals. Additionally, analysis of hypothetical income redistribution policies suggests their potential complementary role in reducing energy inequalities, achieving higher outcomes to energy-focused policies alone in some of the studied cities. These findings have important implications for urban energy policy design in Africa. While current stated policies show promise in reducing overall energy and emissions inequalities, achieving more equitable outcomes would benefit from: (1) decentralizing energy access and governance and enabling regulatory frameworks, (2) building local research expertise and data infrastructure v to support context-specific planning, (3) enabling economic equity through policies that encourage community wealth creation and local ownership of energy assets, and (4) strengthening municipal authority while fostering strategic coalitions across governance levels.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42468
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
Eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:28.738Z
license_str Creative Commons
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Department of Chemical Engineering
publisherStr Department of Chemical Engineering
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42468 Bridging the urban energy divide: equity-focused transition pathways for sub-Saharan African cities Yongoua Nana, Joel Winkler, Harald Bloch Von Blottnitz, Harro Chemical Engineering This thesis examines how alternative urban energy transition pathways in Sub-Saharan Africa could simultaneously address the imperatives of equitable energy access and use across different income groups, while meeting other development and sustainability goals. Through detailed analysis of six cities - ranging from metropolitan centres to smaller towns - the research provides new insights into the patterns and drivers of energy inequalities in African urban contexts. The study makes several contributions to knowledge. First, it presents the first comprehensive, multi-city analysis of urban energy consumption and emissions across key economic sectors in African cities. Key findings highlight that urban energy profiles in Sub-Saharan Africa exhibit far greater heterogeneity than often recognized. Results from the scenario analysis also showed that this heterogeneity results in varied equity outcomes even when the study cities were subjected to the same policy interventions, therefore demanding more context-specific approaches to urban energy policy design. The research also identifies electricity use as uniquely significant among energy carriers, showing both the strongest correlation with GDP and typically the most unevenly distributed across household quintiles. Second, the thesis makes relevant methodological contributions through the development and implementation of the Urban Household Energy Model (UHEM), a transparent bottom-up modelling framework custom-designed to analyse household energy inequalities in African urban contexts. Through extended application of the Gini coefficient and Lorenz curve to previously inaccessible municipal datasets, the research provides new evidence that household energy use inequalities consistently show significantly lower magnitudes than income inequalities, suggesting that energy's status as a fundamental need creates a "floor effect" in consumption patterns. This, however, does not extend to electricity use, which shows markedly higher inequalities, in some cases even exceeding income inequality. Third, the research advances both scholarly understanding and practical policy development through its assessment of energy transition policies. Analysis of current policy commitments (Stated Energy Policies Scenario - STEPS) reveals that despite often lacking clearly actionable measures on equity, these interventions could achieve meaningful reductions in household energy use inequalities, with clean cooking and electricity access interventions typically the most powerful levers for reducing household energy inequalities. The research further examines two alternative scenarios - Blues and Harmony - specifically designed through an equity lens. The Blues scenario, emphasizing bottom-up, community-driven approaches, demonstrated more significant outcomes across most metrics, achieving substantially greater reductions in household energy use inequality than STEPS and Harmony across several study cities. However, the findings have revealed a non-linear relationship between clean energy access and inequality reduction, suggesting diminishing returns beyond certain thresholds of clean energy adoption in advancing equity goals. Additionally, analysis of hypothetical income redistribution policies suggests their potential complementary role in reducing energy inequalities, achieving higher outcomes to energy-focused policies alone in some of the studied cities. These findings have important implications for urban energy policy design in Africa. While current stated policies show promise in reducing overall energy and emissions inequalities, achieving more equitable outcomes would benefit from: (1) decentralizing energy access and governance and enabling regulatory frameworks, (2) building local research expertise and data infrastructure v to support context-specific planning, (3) enabling economic equity through policies that encourage community wealth creation and local ownership of energy assets, and (4) strengthening municipal authority while fostering strategic coalitions across governance levels. 2025-12-19T12:25:20Z 2025-12-19T12:25:20Z 2025 2025-12-19T12:24:04Z Thesis / Dissertation Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42468 en Eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ application/pdf Department of Chemical Engineering Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment
spellingShingle Chemical Engineering
Yongoua Nana, Joel
Bridging the urban energy divide: equity-focused transition pathways for sub-Saharan African cities
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Bridging the urban energy divide: equity-focused transition pathways for sub-Saharan African cities
title_full Bridging the urban energy divide: equity-focused transition pathways for sub-Saharan African cities
title_fullStr Bridging the urban energy divide: equity-focused transition pathways for sub-Saharan African cities
title_full_unstemmed Bridging the urban energy divide: equity-focused transition pathways for sub-Saharan African cities
title_short Bridging the urban energy divide: equity-focused transition pathways for sub-Saharan African cities
title_sort bridging the urban energy divide equity focused transition pathways for sub saharan african cities
topic Chemical Engineering
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42468
work_keys_str_mv AT yongouananajoel bridgingtheurbanenergydivideequityfocusedtransitionpathwaysforsubsaharanafricancities