Introduction
For people living in poverty, the most pressing priority is the
satisfaction of basic human needs, which includes access to food, shelter, water
supply and sanitation and other services that will improve their standard of
living, such as health care, education, and better transport. Problems of
poverty in all its dimensions can be addressed with the improved provision of
energy services. It is significant that most of those without access to modern
energy services live in developing countries and belong to the segment of the
human population that lives in poverty. While reliable and adequate energy
supplies do not guarantee economic growth and employment generation, their
absence typically limits growth. Although low energy consumption is not a cause
of poverty, the lack of available energy services correlates closely with many
poverty indicators. Moreover, the prospects for income generating activities
that can help break the cycle of poverty often rely on the availability of
energy. Nearly 2 billion people, constituting about a third of humanity,
continue to rely on biomass fuels and traditional technologies for cooking and
heating. About 1.5-to-2 billion people have no access to electricity.
The link between poverty and energy should not, however, be
construed simply in terms of inability of the poor to afford better energy
services. Energy services constitute a sizeable share of total household
expenditure in developing countries. People living in poverty often pay a higher
price per unit of energy services than do the rich. They also spend more time
obtaining these energy services and rely on resource-scarce and polluting ways
of converting energy for services like cooking, drinking water, heating and
lighting, all of which have associated health impacts. Often, it is the absence
of institutional arrangements to widen the access to modern energy services that
characterises the condition of people living in poverty.
The production and use of energy have environmental consequences
at local, regional and global levels. These impacts extend throughout the fuel
cycle of an Energy Chain (see figure 1), that is, the entire chain of activities
from resource through to end-use. They could also manifest themselves over
short, medium or long time-scales, or have cascading effects by combining with
other environmental problems. Energy services are the desired and useful
products, processes, or services that result from the use of energy, for
instance, illumination, comfortable indoor climate, refrigerated storage,
transportation, appropriate temperatures for cooking, materials, etc. The energy
chain to deliver these services begins with the collection or extraction of
primary energy, which is then converted into energy carriers suitable for the
end-use(s). These energy carriers are used in energy end-use technologies to
provide the desired energy services (see figure 1). Thus far, most discussions
of the energy sector have focussed on supply-side issues. However, the energy
system involves much more than what is conventionally considered the energy
sector and unless the scope of discussions about energy is extended, energy
efficiency will receive less attention than it deserves.
The Human Development Index (HDI) developed by UNDP is a
composite measure of development based on indicators of longevity, knowledge and
standard of living. The relationship between HDI and per capita commercial
energy consumption demonstrates that there is a steep increase in HDI as per
capita energy consumption increases in countries whose per capita energy
consumption is very low, as it is in the vast majority of developing countries.
Therefore, modest increases in per capita energy consumption for the poorest
countries can lead to tremendous improvements the quality of life of people
living in these countries.
Policies and programmes that create opportunities for people
living in poverty to improve their energy services, by making more efficient use
of commercial and non-commercial energy and by shifting to higher quality energy
carriers, will allow them to improve their standard of living. The substitution
of modern energy carriers and more efficient energy conversion devices would
confer sizeable gains in purchasing power on poor households. Improvements in
energy efficiency have considerable potential to reduce poverty in all of its
major dimensions and to facilitate development.

Figure 1 Energy Chain
Source: IPCC (1996).
Energy interventions can help in the challenges of poverty
alleviation and environmental protection. The conventional belief has been that
poverty and environment are linked in a "downward spiral" in which people living
in poverty, forced to overuse environmental resources for their daily survival,
are further impoverished by the degradation of these resources. Increasingly,
however, it has become evident that people living in poverty are capable of
creating arrangements that protect the environment while sustaining their
livelihoods, to the extent that they are provided access to superior technology
and finance. Thus, improved energy services will increase their satisfaction of
basic needs, and in the process, reduce their adverse impacts on the
environment. Nevertheless, realising this dual potential requires institutional
as much as technological innovation. Primarily, the level of energy services,
rather than energy consumption, needs to be taken as the indicator of
development.
Energy is directly related to the most pressing social,
environmental, economic and security issues which affect sustainable
development. These include: poverty, jobs and income levels, access to social
services, the situation of women, population growth, agricultural production and
food scarcity, health, land degradation, climate change and environmental
quality, and economic and security issues. These linkages and the past
development patterns of the world have produced an unsustainable situation, as
discussed in the recent UNDP publication, Energy after Rio: Prospects and
Challenges (UNDP, 1997). Energy challenges should be tackled in ways such that
these social, environmental, economic and security problems are ameliorated-not
aggravated - as is typically the case with conventional energy strategies, which
either ignore these global problems or do not deal with them adequately. Energy
strategies, policies, programmes and projects should be consistent with, and
contribute to, the solutions of the major global problems. The global goal for
energy should be to make energy an instrument to help realize the broader goal
of sustainable development. This paper examines the poverty-energy-environment
nexus in light of the key elements of the debate, current experiences and
policies to increase the use of sustainable energy technologies and to reduce
the impact of poverty on resource
degradation.