Burning polluting fossil fuels is the main cause of the greenhouse gas emissions causing climate change, which is hitting the poorest communities hardest. Phasing out investment in fossil fuels and scaling up support for renewable and efficient energy systems to reach 100 per cent by 2050 will be critical for remaining under 1.5°C of global warming.
Download - UK support for energy 2010-17 report
Download - UK support for energy 2010-18 report
Access to modern energy can also play a key role in delivering other sustainable development goals (SDGs), including those on health, education, inclusive economic development and gender equality, as well as wider environmental sustainability. SDG 7 aims to ensure universal access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy by 2030. Billions of people still do not have access to electricity or cook with polluting solid fuels. Indoor air pollution can have devastating health impacts, particularly for women and children.
Eighty-seven per cent of people without electricity live in rural areas, far from centralised electricity grids, in what is called the ‘last mile’. A least-cost assessment indicates that for them to access electricity, over two-thirds of investment should be in distributed (off-grid and mini-grid) solutions powered by renewable energy (DRE).
Currently there is a financing gap for energy access, and particularly for DRE and clean cooking solutions. International public finance from donor countries like the UK has a vital role to play in plugging this gap and in supporting poorer countries to shift or leapfrog to renewable and efficient energy systems that benefit everyone, including the world's poorest people.
Since 2016, CAFOD in collaboration with the Overseas Development Institute (ODI) has analysed UK public support for energy overseas to see if it is aligned with the UK’s climate change and development goals. Our latest research using an updated methodology analyses UK support for energy overseas in the period 2010–11 to 2017–18. This includes the years after the UK’s adoption of the Paris Agreement and the SDGs in 2015.