Access to electricity (% of population) - Country Ranking - Africa

Definition: Access to electricity is the percentage of population with access to electricity. Electrification data are collected from industry, national surveys and international sources.

Source: World Bank, Sustainable Energy for All (SE4ALL) database from the SE4ALL Global Tracking Framework led jointly by the World Bank, International Energy Agency, and the Energy Sector Management Assistance Program.

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Egypt 100.00 2020
1 Morocco 100.00 2020
1 Seychelles 100.00 2020
1 Tunisia 100.00 2020
5 Algeria 99.80 2020
6 Mauritius 99.66 2020
7 Cabo Verde 94.16 2020
8 Gabon 91.57 2020
9 Comoros 86.74 2020
10 Ghana 85.87 2020
11 South Africa 84.39 2020
12 Eswatini 79.73 2020
13 São Tomé and Principe 76.56 2020
14 Botswana 71.99 2020
15 Kenya 71.44 2020
16 Senegal 70.37 2020
17 Libya 69.71 2020
18 Côte d'Ivoire 69.68 2020
19 Equatorial Guinea 66.75 2020
20 Cameroon 64.72 2020
21 The Gambia 62.27 2020
22 Djibouti 61.77 2020
23 Namibia 56.26 2020
24 Nigeria 55.40 2020
25 Sudan 55.39 2020
26 Togo 54.00 2020
27 Zimbabwe 52.75 2020
28 Eritrea 52.17 2020
29 Ethiopia 51.09 2020
30 Mali 50.56 2020
31 Somalia 49.73 2020
32 Congo 49.52 2020
33 Lesotho 47.35 2020
34 Mauritania 47.35 2020
35 Angola 46.89 2020
36 Rwanda 46.60 2020
37 Guinea 44.67 2020
38 Zambia 44.52 2020
39 Uganda 42.07 2020
40 Benin 41.41 2020
41 Tanzania 39.90 2020
42 Madagascar 33.74 2020
43 Guinea-Bissau 33.34 2020
44 Mozambique 30.60 2020
45 Liberia 27.53 2020
46 Sierra Leone 26.20 2020
47 Niger 19.25 2020
48 Dem. Rep. Congo 19.10 2020
49 Burkina Faso 18.96 2020
50 Central African Republic 15.47 2020
51 Malawi 14.87 2020
52 Burundi 11.74 2020
53 Chad 11.08 2020

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Development Relevance: Maintaining reliable and secure electricity services while seeking to rapidly decarbonize power systems is a key challenge for countries throughout the world. More and more countries are becoming increasing dependent on reliable and secure electricity supplies to underpin economic growth and community prosperity. This reliance is set to grow as more efficient and less carbon intensive forms of power are developed and deployed to help decarbonize economies. Energy is necessary for creating the conditions for economic growth. It is impossible to operate a factory, run a shop, grow crops or deliver goods to consumers without using some form of energy. Access to electricity is particularly crucial to human development as electricity is, in practice, indispensable for certain basic activities, such as lighting, refrigeration and the running of household appliances, and cannot easily be replaced by other forms of energy. Individuals' access to electricity is one of the most clear and un-distorted indication of a country's energy poverty status. Electricity access is increasingly at the forefront of governments' preoccupations, especially in the developing countries. As a consequence, a lot of rural electrification programs and national electrification agencies have been created in these countries to monitor more accurately the needs and the status of rural development and electrification. Use of energy is important in improving people's standard of living. But electricity generation also can damage the environment. Whether such damage occurs depends largely on how electricity is generated. For example, burning coal releases twice as much carbon dioxide - a major contributor to global warming - as does burning an equivalent amount of natural gas.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: Data for access to electricity are collected among different sources: mostly data from nationally representative household surveys (including national censuses) were used. Survey sources include Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) and Living Standards Measurement Surveys (LSMS), Multi-Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS), the World Health Survey (WHS), other nationally developed and implemented surveys, and various government agencies (for example, ministries of energy and utilities). Given the low frequency and the regional distribution of some surveys, a number of countries have gaps in available data. To develop the historical evolution and starting point of electrification rates, a simple modeling approach was adopted to fill in the missing data points - around 1990, around 2000, and around 2010. Therefore, a country can have a continuum of zero to three data points. There are 42 countries with zero data point and the weighted regional average was used as an estimate for electrification in each of the data periods. 170 countries have between one and three data points and missing data are estimated by using a model with region, country, and time variables. The model keeps the original observation if data is available for any of the time periods. This modeling approach allowed the estimation of electrification rates for 212 countries over these three time periods (Indicated as "Estimate"). Notation "Assumption" refers to the assumption of universal access in countries classified as developed by the United Nations. Data begins from the year in which the first survey data is available for each country.

Aggregation method: Weighted average

Periodicity: Annual