TED Talks Daily - 700 million people still live without electricity. Here’s how to fix that | Jacqueline Novogratz
Episode Date: July 22, 2025Impact investor and Acumen CEO Jacqueline Novogratz unveils a bold vision to bring off-grid solar electricity to 700 million people still living in darkness, transforming lives while slashing emission...s. She asks a thought-provoking question: What if this generation could be remembered for finally bringing electricity — and dignity — to everyone on the planet?For a chance to give your own TED Talk, fill out the Idea Search Application: ted.com/ideasearch.Interested in learning more about upcoming TED events? Follow these links:TEDNext: ted.com/futureyouTEDSports: ted.com/sportsTEDAI Vienna: ted.com/ai-vienna Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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You're listening to TED Talks Daily, where we bring you new ideas to spark your curiosity
every day.
I'm your host, Elise Hugh.
In 100 years, what will future generations say about us and what we did or didn't do
for them and this planet?
It's a powerful question that Impact investor Jacqueline Novogratz asks in her talk,
where she lays out a plan to bring electricity
to everyone on the planet, fixing, as she calls it,
one of the biggest planetary market failures
of our lifetime.
For Jacqueline, it is in darkness that instability,
forced migration, and inequality rise.
Sharing examples of success stories
her firm has invested in, she lays
out how this dream is possible and asks us to consider what is the risk of not daring
to be better and not daring to bring light sustainably to all.
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I want to share with you a plan to fix one of the biggest planetary market failures of our lifetime.
It's been nearly 150 years since Thomas Edison invented the incandescent light
bulb, ushering in the age of electricity.
So how can it be that 700 million people on this planet still lack access
to electricity?
When the sun goes down, they depend on dirty, dirty, dirty, dirty, dirty, How can it be that 700 million people on this planet still lack access to electricity?
When the sun goes down, they depend on dirty, expensive,
sometimes dangerous fuels for light.
And these are some of the most overlooked
and underestimated people on the planet.
But we can solve this problem
if we have the moral imagination to do two things.
First, we have to rethink how we approach risk.
And second, we have to address the false binary
between mitigation, or reducing emissions,
and adaptation, or adjusting to the climate crisis.
Before we talk about that, though, let's look at what's at stake.
We know that the most vulnerable
are disproportionately impacted by climate events.
Electricity is resilience.
It's agency.
It's light and irrigation and communications,
and it's cooling.
It's also basic empowerment.
We live in an age where tech entrepreneurs are promising
that every child on the planet will have their own AI tutor,
unless you're a child without access to electricity.
The good news is that, as we've discussed,
solar energy has been one of the great success stories of the 21st century.
When my organization, Acumen, started investing in off-grid electricity in 2007,
1.5 billion people on the planet had no access to electricity.
Today, that number's been cut in half.
And while off-grid can't claim full credit,
it's been an important part of the story.
full credit, it's been an important part of the story.
And I've had the privilege of investing in and witnessing
the evolution of this extraordinary off-grid sector
that started off with lights,
and then we saw home systems with radios and cell phone chargers,
and then emerged the adjacent possible.
Solar televisions and cook stoves
and solar irrigation and refrigeration and e-mobility,
and today you can see thousands of electric motorbikes
powering down the streets of Kenya and Rwanda.
I've also been able to talk to so many customers across the continent,
like Susan, who said that what surprised her when she got her solar system
was that she no longer experienced deep fear every single night.
She said, I used to fear bandits, wild animals, men,
or going to the toilet, her external toilet,
and being bitten by a snake.
She said,
Now I don't feel stress.
My children and I have more connection,
and indeed, they'd finished watching a course on their solar television
to learn sign language in Kiswahili
so that for the first time in their lives,
they were able to communicate with their deaf cousins.
Energy is independence,
and it has great economic impact.
The average family reduces energy spending by more than 50 percent,
and this is a sector that has created more than 370,000 good jobs.
We as a world are on track
to reach another 300 million people by the end of the decade.
That still leaves hundreds of millions living in the dark.
These are the hardest to reach.
In places like Burundi, with an 11 percent electrification rate,
Malawi, 16, Chad, 12.
And those aren't just statistics. Those are human beings.
And yet too often, we dismiss them as too poor, too risky, too hard.
So let me say this clearly.
This is about our shared human dignity.
If we believe that all human beings deserve dignity
and we understand that all human beings deserve dignity
and we understand that the impact of climate
will disproportionately impact the most vulnerable amongst us,
then these are precisely the people on whom we need to focus.
Because electricity isn't just about light.
It's about communication during floods, irrigation during droughts.
It's about cooling medicines during heat waves and pandemics.
It's about hospitals and schools, businesses,
so that isolated communities, already fragile,
can build resilience in an increasingly volatile climate.
Adaptation matters,
but this story has equal urgency for mitigation.
Now, today, the continent only contributes 3.5 percent
of total global emissions,
and the average African consumes about one-fifteenth the energy of an American.
But those are the wrong numbers to pay attention to.
What matters is future emissions.
The continent's population is expected to grow
from 1.5 to 2.5 billion people by 2050.
And so the question is, what kind of energy will fuel it?
What we've learned from investing in off-grid
is that once families are on the first rung of the solar energy ladder,
they don't go back.
That's good news for the planet and for its people.
If we just brought electricity to 10 million families, basic level,
we would avert more than 27 million tons of carbons looking forward
and create about 10 billion dollars in direct economic benefit.
Multiply that, and you get transformation.
But how do we do it?
The companies are here, but the capital is not.
And one thing for certain is that money cannot be the constraint.
Because last year, the world allocated two trillion dollars
to transitioning industry from fossil fuels to cleaner energy.
But less than 800 million want to off-grid solar.
That's less than 0.1 percent, and it makes no sense.
Because climate finance isn't scarce.
It's scared.
And maybe at first glance you can understand it.
Customers make a few dollars a day.
Macroeconomic headwinds, like inflation, depreciation,
have pummeled markets.
Inequality, lack of jobs.
In some places, uncertain leadership.
OK.
But if we focus only on narratives that talk about the problem,
we miss the much bigger narrative of the opportunity.
Electricity is foundational,
and we can solve this problem,
but we need the right kind of capital to open up new energy markets.
And a lot of people have been thinking for a long time
about how to do that
in ways that are more important today in a post-AID era.
My organization has been building on our investing work for many years
to create an initiative called The Hardest to Reach.
It's essentially a multilayered capital stack
that's a blend of philanthropy, impact investing,
funds from development finance institutions and a commercial bank.
It starts with 60 million dollars in philanthropy
so that we can take early-stage, patient capital investments
and those companies operating in the most challenging climates.
Philanthropy lets you go fast.
So already we've invested 12 million dollars in eight companies
in Sierra Leone, Beining, Malawi,
the DRC, and most recently, Somalia.
Side-by-side is a debt facility that is impact-aligned.
It's anchored with funding from the Green Climate Fund and others,
and again, that allows us to bring in more institutional capital above,
including Shinhan, the largest commercial bank in Korea.
Thus far, 21 different stakeholders across the capital continuum,
from grants to impact to commercial,
have come together to bring a quarter billion dollars in financing
to Africa's most challenging energy markets.
Now, making this happen hasn't been easy.
It has relied on the leadership, the courage
and the competence of a whole lot of people,
including in big institutions.
But that is exactly the kind of moral imagination
that we need to rethink the way we approach investing.
Because it is just not OK to let financial risk have the final word.
to let financial risk have the final word.
(*Applause*) If we're smart enough and careful enough,
we can offset financial risks.
But equally important, what is the risk of not daring?
Leaving hundreds of millions of people in the dark
and watching instability, emissions and migration of not daring, leaving hundreds of millions of people in the dark
and watching instability, emissions and migration rise.
It means cutting off human potential, possibility, creativity.
You see, risk is not just a financial concept.
It's an environmental concept, a social concept,
and it is most definitely a moral concept.
And so yes, we can structure the right kind of capital,
but we need all of the players to go from asking,
am I getting the highest return?
To what is the problem?
We're trying to solve what is the capital that is needed
and where can I play a role?
And also, if you take a long-term investor's perspective,
think about the hundreds of millions of new electricity consumers
that will need new appliances and new innovations and new services.
Completely new markets will emerge. We know this because we've seen this.
And though this is hard, it is eminently within our reach.
In history,
there aren't that many chances to do something as big and important
and as difficult as bringing electricity to everyone on the planet.
But I sometimes ask myself,
in a hundred years,
what will that generation say about us?
Will they gasp in astonishment
and say,
we were the ones that finally brought electricity and possibility
and human dignity to everyone?
Or will they wonder,
how could they have averted their eyes and left hundreds of millions behind?
I hope they say, murdered their eyes and left hundreds of millions behind.
I hope they say
we learned to control capital and technology
and not be controlled by it.
I hope they say we cared,
that we did hard things,
that we loved the world,
and in doing so, we set ourselves free.
The poet Huffus wrote,
even after all these years,
the sun never says to the earth,
you owe me.
Look what happens with a love like that.
It lights the whole sky.
So let's get going. Thank you. That was Jaclyn Novogratz at TED Countdown Summit Nairobi in 2025. If you're curious
about TED's curation, find out more at Ted.com slash curation guidelines.
And that's it for today's show.
TED Talks Daily is part of the TED Audio Collective.
This episode was produced and edited by our team,
Martha Estefanos, Oliver Friedman, Brian Green, Lucy Little, Alejandra Salazar, and Tonsika Sarmarnivon.
It was mixed by Christopher Fazy-Bogan.
Additional support from Emma Taubner and Daniela Balarezzo.
I'm Elise Hu.
I'll be back tomorrow with a fresh idea for your feed.
Thanks for listening.
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You sailed beyond the horizon
in search of an island scrubbed from every map.
You battled Krakens and navigated through storms. in search of an island scrubbed from every map.
You battled Krakens and navigated through storms.
Your spades struck the lid of a long-lost treasure chest.
While you cooked a lasagna, there's
more to imagine when you listen.
Discover best-selling adventure stories on Audible.