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World Economic Forum ®
1
1 Unsubsidized, from 0.36 to 0.1 USD/kWh 2 Unsubsidized, From 0.135 to 0.042 USD/kWh 3 Li-Ion; From 960 USD/kWh in 2016 to $650/kWh in 2024
SOURCE: Lazard, IRENA, BNEF, IEA, EIA, IHS, IFC, Tracking SDG7, New York Times
Source: The Speed of Energy Transition – Gradual or Rapid Change (World Economic Forum, 2019)
Launch of
Energy
Architecture
Performance
Index
Case studies on
challenges for
EU28, NAM,
MENA, BRICS,
ASEAN, Sub-
Saharan Africa
Thematic focus
on energy
reforms in
major energy
consuming
economies
Deep dive on
“Energy Access
and Security”
Deep dive on
“Energy Sector
Governance”
Revised
methodology
element,
launched
Energy
Transition Index
Regional
energy
transition
challenges
focus, coverage
on speed and
complexity
Economic development
and growth
Security
and access
Environmental
sustainability
Energy
triangle
System performance imperatives
Economic growth and development
Environmental sustainability
Energy access and security
Extent to which a country’s energy
architecture adds or detracts from the
economy
Environmental impact of energy supply and
consumption
Extent to which a energy supply is secure,
accessible and diversified
Infrastructure and
innovative
business
environment
Enabling
dimensions
Institutions
and governance
Regulation
and political
commitment
Capital
and investment
Human capital
and consumer
participation
Energy system
structure Energy System Structure
Regulation and Political Commitment
Infrastructure and Innovative Business
Environment
• Access to credit
• Investment in energy efficiency
and renewable energy
• Regulatory Stability and
Commitment
• Policy and regulatory support for
sustainable energy
• Jobs in low carbon
industry
• Quality of Education
• Technology path dependency
• Energy consumption per capita
• Manageable risk
• Increased transparency
• Ease of doing business
• Transport infrastructure
• Trade logistics
• Technology availability
Capital and Investment
Human Capital and Consumer
Participation
Institutions and Governance
Measuring output oriented observational
data or best available proxy
Output variables
Sourced from renowned institutions
Reliability
Maintain same data partners on regular
basis, for annual updates
Reusability
Adequate global and temporal coverage
Completeness
Represents best available measures,
given constraints
Quality
Environmental
sustainability
Security and
access
Economic development
and growth
61%
49% 71%Energy system
structure
Human
capital and
consumer
participation Infrastructure and
innovative business
environment
Institutions and
governance
Regulation
and
political
commitment
Capital and
investment
46%
55%
54%
51%
39%
57%
System performance scores Transition readiness scores
3.0%
5.3%
0.5%
Economic growth &development
Energy access &security
Environmentalsustainability
•
•
74.9%
74.3%
73.4%
73.0%
72.2%
70.7%
70.2%
68.6%
68.5%
68.5%
81.2%
78.0%
81.6%
72.3%
71.8%
70.8%
74.3%
76.8%
71.5%
74.8%
68.6%
70.6%
65.2%
73.7%
72.6%
70.6%
66.1%
60.4%
65.5%
62.1%
•
•
•
•
World Economic Forum delivers
negative ranking to Australia on
power prices and emissions25 March 2019
Thailand rises three places in WEF energy transition index25 March 2019
SA at the bottom of the pile in transition towards clean energy25 March 2019
Transición energética se estanca en el mundo, según el Foro Económico Mundial25 March 2019
Egypt ranked 86 out of 115 countries on WEF’s ETI
2019
25 March 2019
UK well placed in clean energy race
25 March 2019
Le Canada à la remorque d’un
monde qui fait du surplace
26 March 2019
•
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•
•
•
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•
0%
25%
50%
75%
100%
0%
25%
50%
75%
100%