Publication - The Impact of Mini-Grids on Rural Energy-Access Indicators in Developing Countries: A Systematic Review
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Title
The Impact of Mini-Grids on Rural Energy-Access Indicators in Developing Countries: A Systematic Review
Publisher
Energies
Author
Ibanga Effiong, Gabrial Anandarajah, and Olivier Dessens
Published in
March 2026
Abstract
first_page
settings Order Article Reprints Open AccessSystematic Review The Impact of Mini-Grids on Rural Energy-Access Indicators in Developing Countries: A Systematic Review by Ibanga Effiong
- [ORCID] , Gabrial Anandarajah
[ORCID] and Olivier Dessens UCL Energy Institute, University College London, Central House, 14 Upper Woburn Place, London WC1H 0NN, UK
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed. Energies 2026, 19(6), 1441; https://doi.org/10.3390/en19061441 Submission received: 21 January 2026 / Revised: 27 February 2026 / Accepted: 10 March 2026 / Published: 12 March 2026 Download keyboard_arrow_down Browse Figure Versions Notes
Abstract
Mini-grids are increasingly deployed to expand rural electrification in developing countries, yet evidence on service-quality performance remains uneven. This systematic review synthesises empirical evidence from 22 peer-reviewed studies (2005–2025) on rural mini-grid performance across six energy-access indicators: electrification rate, availability of supply, hours of supply, affordability, reliability, and consistency (power quality). Using PRISMA-guided database searches in Scopus and Web of Science, 138 records were identified; following de-duplication and screening, 22 studies met the inclusion criteria. The evidence base is concentrated in Africa and Asia, and most studies adopt mixed-methods approaches combining household- and/or enterprise-level evidence with system or operational data. Across indicators, electrification outcomes are frequently positive but reported using heterogeneous metrics, often relying on connection counts rather than population-referenced rates (10/22 studies report electrification outcomes). Service availability and hours of supply vary widely, ranging from evening-only provision (~5 h/day) to near-continuous service (24 h/day), with several studies documenting demand–capacity mismatch and load shedding (9/22 quantify availability; 12/22 quantify hours). Affordability is most frequently reported (16/22 studies), spanning substantial household cost reductions in some settings to high tariffs that constrain uptake in remote contexts. Reliability is seldom quantified using extractable outage/downtime metrics (4/22 studies). No study reports standardised voltage/frequency power-quality measures; only proxy evidence relates to consistency, leaving power quality as a major evidence gap. Mini-grids can deliver meaningful improvements in rural electricity access, but the literature remains constrained by inconsistent indicator definitions, limited standardised reliability/power-quality measurement, and short monitoring horizons. Future research and regulation should prioritise harmonised service-quality metrics and longer-term, field-based performance evaluation.URL
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