Litcius/Paper detail

Gender and ethnic disparities in energy poverty: The case of South Africa

Saul Ngarava, Leocadia Zhou, Thulani Ningi, Martin Munashe Chari, Lwandiso Mdiya

2021Energy Policy119 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The study ascertained the differentiated energy poverty of female-headed households based on their race/ethnicity in South Africa. The study made use of the 2016 General Household Survey (GHS). A sample of 7322 male-headed households and 6170 female-headed households was utilised. An Energy Vulnerability Index (EVI), Independent t-test and Propensity Score Matching (PSM) were used to analyse the data. The results show that male-headed households had more exposure, adaptive capacity and sensitivity to energy poverty compared to female-headed households. Overall, female-headed households were more vulnerable to energy poverty. Compared to White, Indian/Asian and Coloured female-headed households, Black/African female-headed households exhibited more vulnerability to energy poverty. The study concludes that gender of the household head and race/ethnicity of the female-headed households had impact on the energy poverty in South Africa. The study recommends the need to identify relevant gender and race/ethnic issues concerning energy. Furthermore, there is need to counter gendered-ethnic disparities in renewable energy programmes for poorer households, to avail alternative energy sources. Energy policy such as the Free Basic Electricity, besides being pro-poor, should also consider gender and the ethnic divide. Economic opportunities for low income female-headed households should also be promoted to reduce vulnerability to energy poverty.

Topics & Concepts

Energy povertyEthnic groupPovertyVulnerability (computing)GeographySocioeconomicsRace (biology)Demographic economicsEconomicsDemographyDevelopment economicsPolitical scienceEconomic growthSociologyMedicineGender studiesAlternative medicineComputer securityPathologyLawPanacea (medicine)Computer scienceEnergy and Environment ImpactsPoverty, Education, and Child WelfareHybrid Renewable Energy Systems