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Difference between revisions of "Renewable Energy Research in Africa: A Bibliometric Review"
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'''Ding, Y. et al. (2024). "Renewable Energy Research in Africa: A Bibliometric Review (1979–2022)." International Journal of Sustainable Development and Planning, 19(2), pp. 373–384.''' | '''Ding, Y. et al. (2024). "Renewable Energy Research in Africa: A Bibliometric Review (1979–2022)." International Journal of Sustainable Development and Planning, 19(2), pp. 373–384.''' | ||
Licensed under [https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Creative Commons CC BY 4.0]. Original available at: [https://www.iieta.org/journals/ijsdp/paper/10.18280/ijsdp.190205 IIETA Journal]. | Licensed under [https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Creative Commons CC BY 4.0]. Original available at: [https://www.iieta.org/journals/ijsdp/paper/10.18280/ijsdp.190205 IIETA Journal]. | ||
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Latest revision as of 09:17, 27 October 2025
Renewable Energy Research in Africa: A Bibliometric Review (1979–2022)
Introduction
Renewable energy has emerged as a cornerstone of Africa’s sustainable development agenda. With abundant solar, wind, hydro, and geothermal potential, the continent has opportunities to leapfrog into a low-carbon future. To understand how renewable energy research has evolved across Africa, a bibliometric study (1979–2022) examined key trends, collaborations, and research gaps.
Key Findings
- Growth in Publications: Research output on renewable energy in Africa has steadily increased since the 2000s, with a sharp rise after 2010.
- Dominant Countries: South Africa, Nigeria, Egypt, and Kenya are leading contributors, reflecting their growing investments in higher education and energy transition programs.
- Research Themes: Major topics include solar photovoltaics, bioenergy, wind energy, hydropower, and energy efficiency.
- Collaboration Networks: International partnerships, especially with Europe and Asia, drive much of Africa’s renewable energy research. However, intra-African collaboration remains limited.
- Gaps Identified: Research often focuses on technology development but less on deployment models, financing, and policy integration needed for large-scale impact.
Implications for Energy Access
- Evidence shows the need to strengthen local research ecosystems to address context-specific challenges.
- Increased South–South collaboration could accelerate knowledge transfer across the continent.
- Research should move beyond technical potential to include policy, business models, and socio-economic impacts of renewable energy systems.
Conclusion
Africa’s renewable energy research landscape is growing, yet uneven. Closing gaps in collaboration and policy-oriented research will be critical for scaling renewable energy solutions that can support universal energy access by 2030.
Attribution
This article is based on: Ding, Y. et al. (2024). "Renewable Energy Research in Africa: A Bibliometric Review (1979–2022)." International Journal of Sustainable Development and Planning, 19(2), pp. 373–384. Licensed under Creative Commons CC BY 4.0. Original available at: IIETA Journal.



















