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With a population of 15.8 million, Cambodia is one of Asia's fastest growing economies; its growth has averaged 7.6% a year over the past decade (higher than the regional average of 5.1%). Upon halving its poverty rate in 2009, Cambodia achieved Millennium Development Goal 1. Moreover, in 2015, after 20 years of steady economic growth, Cambodia secured lower-middle-income status. Despite this notable achievement, 4.5 million people in Cambodia are still considered near-poor, with the country ranking 143rd on the United Nations Development Programme's 2016 Human Development Index. The Cambodian government is committed to expanding energy access throughout the country. With close to 79% of the Cambodian population residing in rural areas, through its surveys, the Multi-Tier Framework (MTF) team collected compelling data on energy access in urban and rural areas. Highlights of these abundant findings can be found in MTF's comprehensive Energy Access Country Diagnostic Report, which can be accessed on MTF's country webpage: https://energydata.info/dataset/cambodia-multi-tier-framework-mtf-survey-2018.
Electric Power --- Electricity --- Energy --- Energy Consumption --- Environment --- Environment and Energy Efficiency --- Fuels --- Gender --- Gender and Economics --- Solar Energy
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Located in the Horn of Africa, Ethiopia is the second most populous country in Sub-Saharan Africa, home to more than 100 million people. Over 80 percent of Ethiopia's population live in rural areas, with agriculture functioning as the backbone of the country's economy. In the past decade, Ethiopia has become one of the world's fastest growing economies, with a 10.9 percent growth rate that represents twice the region's average growth rate of 5 percent. This growth positively impacted the country's extreme poverty rate, which fell 24 percentage points between 2000 and 2011.The Ethiopian government has made universal access to electricity a goal that it aims to reach by 2025; it aims to achieve this by including off-grid technologies - inclusive of mini-grids and off-grid solar solutions - in its universal electrification strategy. The government has also made access to modern energy cooking solutions a priority, which is significant in a country that traditionally uses biomass as its primary fuel (evident in more than 90 percent of the country's households). To learn more about these facts and the Multi-Tier Framework (MTF) results and analysis on Ethiopia's energy access rates, please visit MTF's country web page, engage with dynamic data, and download MTF's comprehensive Energy Access Country Diagnostic Report: https://energydata.info/dataset/ethiopia---multi-tier-framework--mtf--survey--2018-.
Electric Power --- Electricity --- Energy --- Energy and Environment --- Energy Policies and Economics --- Fuels --- Gender --- Gender and Energy --- Solar Energy --- Stoves
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