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Methodology

Electricity access is measured based on the combination of seven attributes of energy across six tiers of access.  The MTF starts with the lowest level of access (Tier 1), referring to limited access to small quantities of electricity for a few hours per day, enabling the household to use electric lighting and phone charging (see table below).  This level of access can be provided by any technology, even a small solar lighting system.  Higher tiers of access are defined by higher capacity and longer duration of supply, enabling the use of medium and high load appliances (such as refrigerator, washing machine and air conditioning).  A grid is the most likely source for delivering high access tiers, although a diesel generator or a large mini-grid may also do so.  Nonetheless, additional attributes - beyond capacity and duration – are accounted for in higher tiers of access, such as reliability, quality, affordability, legality and safety.  Each attribute is assessed separately, and the overall tier for the household’s access to electricity is calculated by applying the lowest tier obtained in any of the attributes:

Multi-Tier Framework for Measuring Access to Electricity

a.  Previously referred to as “Duration” in the 2015 Beyond Connections report, this MTF attribute is now referred to as “Availability,” examining access to electricity through levels of “Duration” (day and evening).  Aggregate tier is based on lowest tier value across all attributes * Color signifies tier categorization.

Source: Bhatia and Angelou 2015.

Source: Bhatia and Angelou 2015.

Access to modern energy cooking solutions is measured based on six attributes: Cooking Exposure, Cookstove Efficiency, Convenience, Safety of Primary Cookstove, Affordability, and Fuel Availability, (see table below).  Cooking Exposure assesses personal exposure to pollutants from cooking activities, which depends on stove emissions, ventilation structure (which includes cooking location and kitchen volume), and contact time (time spent in the cooking environment).  Cookstove Efficiency assesses the performance of the stove in regard to its thermal efficiency.  Convenience measures the time spent acquiring (through collection or purchase) fuel and preparing fuel and the stove for cooking.  Safety of Primary Cookstove assesses the safety in using the most used cookstove within the household.  Affordability assesses a household’s ability to pay for both the cookstove and fuel.  Fuel Availability assesses the availability of fuel when needed for cooking purposes.

Multi-Tier Framework for Measuring Access to Cooking Solutions

Source: Bhatia and Angelou 2015; ISO 2018
Note: Colors signify tier categorization