Access to clean energy-here defined as electricity, liquefied petroleum gas, biogas, and ethanol-has increased substantially in low-income and middle-income countries over the past three decades.However, millions still lack reliable and affordable access to electricity and clean cooking fuels.This Series paper explores the drivers of clean energy adoption, assesses tools for tracking progress, and examines persistent barriers-including high costs, unreliable supply, and insufficient availability.Simplistic metrics, such as Sustainable Development Goal 7's binary indicators (eg, whether an individual has an electricity connection or not), risk overstating the health and equity impacts of energy transitions by overlooking fuel stacking, dynamic consumption patterns, and the gendered burden of polluting fuels.Drawing from historical trends and national policies, we show how targeted subsidies, robust supply chains, and coordinated investments have spurred increased clean fuel use.Meaningful gains require moving beyond technical fixes to inclusive, evidence-based strategies that address inequities, ensure affordability and reliability, and deliver lasting health benefits. Key messages Clean energy is central to global health, yet billions depend on polluting fuels Economic constraints are the primary determinants of fuel choices and therefore health outcomes Current metrics for clean energy access exaggerate progress and obscure health risks Targeted subsidies, robust supply chains, and coordinated investments have driven progress More rigorous causal evaluations of clean energy policy's health and climate impact are needed Streamlined, transparent funding is essential to meet health and climate goals www.
Gill-Wiehl et al. (Tue,) studied this question.