Azerbaijan Access to Electricity

Percentage of population with access to electricity.

Latest available data

This page uses the latest available World Bank observation (2023). Country-level datasets often lag the current calendar year because they depend on official reporting and validation.

World Bank 2023
Current Value (2023)
100 % of population
Global Ranking
#10 of 214
Data Coverage
1999–2023

Historical Trend

96.7 97.42 98.14 98.86 99.58 100.3 1999200320072011201520192023
Historical Trend

Overview

Azerbaijan's Access to Electricity was 100 % of population in 2023, ranking #10 out of 214 countries.

Between 1999 and 2023, Azerbaijan's Access to Electricity changed from 97 to 100 (3.1%).

Over the past decade, Access to Electricity in Azerbaijan changed by 0.0%, from 100 % of population in 2013 to 100 % of population in 2023.

Where is Azerbaijan?

Azerbaijan

Continent
Asia
Country
Azerbaijan
Coordinates
40.50°, 47.50°

Historical Data

Year Value
1999 97 % of population
2000 98.9 % of population
2001 98.6 % of population
2002 100 % of population
2003 98.8 % of population
2004 99 % of population
2005 99.1 % of population
2006 99.5 % of population
2007 99.5 % of population
2008 99.7 % of population
2009 99.9 % of population
2010 99.9 % of population
2011 99.9 % of population
2012 100 % of population
2013 100 % of population
2014 100 % of population
2015 100 % of population
2016 100 % of population
2017 100 % of population
2018 100 % of population
2019 100 % of population
2020 100 % of population
2021 100 % of population
2022 100 % of population
2023 100 % of population

Global Comparison

Among all countries, Andorra has the highest Access to Electricity at 100 % of population, while South Sudan has the lowest at 5.4 % of population.

Azerbaijan is ranked just above Bosnia and Herzegovina (100 % of population) and just below Aruba (100 % of population).

Definition

Electricity access measures the proportion of people who have a functional and consistent connection to an electricity source. It is the primary metric for tracking progress toward Sustainable Development Goal 7, which aims for universal energy access. According to international standards, a household is considered electrified if it has access to a power source capable of providing at least basic services, such as 4 hours of lighting and the ability to charge a mobile phone daily. This indicator captures connections via the national grid as well as decentralized systems like solar home systems and mini-grids. Beyond simple illumination, access to electricity is a fundamental driver of human development, influencing outcomes in healthcare, education, and economic productivity. While the indicator is often reported as a binary 'yes' or 'no' status, recent frameworks emphasize the importance of measuring the quality, reliability, and affordability of the service provided to households and businesses.

Formula

Electricity Access Rate = (Number of people with access to electricity ÷ Total population) × 100

Methodology

Data on electricity access is primarily compiled by the World Bank in the Global Electrification Database. The methodology integrates three main data streams: nationally representative household surveys, official census data, and administrative reports from national utilities. Surveys like the Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) and Multi-Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS) are critical for capturing consumer-reported access. For years where direct survey data is unavailable, the World Bank employs a multilevel, nonparametric model to estimate electrification rates based on historical trends and regional patterns. This modeling ensures a continuous time series for 212 countries. One known limitation is that administrative data often tracks connections rather than actual service usage, which can lead to overestimates in areas with frequent outages. To address this, recent efforts incorporate satellite-based nighttime light data to verify electrification in remote or conflict-affected regions.

Methodology variants

  • Binary Access (SDG 7.1.1). The standard metric that classifies households as either having or not having an electricity connection, regardless of service quality.
  • Multi-Tier Framework (MTF). A more nuanced approach that ranks access from Tier 0 to Tier 5 based on attributes like capacity, duration, reliability, and safety.
  • Supply-side vs. Demand-side. Supply-side data comes from utility connection records, while demand-side data is collected through direct household surveys and censuses.

How sources differ

The World Bank and the International Energy Agency (IEA) are the primary sources, though they may report slightly different figures due to the IEA's greater reliance on administrative data from energy ministries versus the World Bank's focus on household surveys.

What is a good value?

A rate of 100% indicates universal access, which is the global target for 2030. High-income countries typically maintain rates above 99%, while rates below 50% often signal severe energy poverty and infrastructure gaps, particularly in rural areas.

World ranking

Access to Electricity ranking for 2023 based on World Bank data, covering 214 countries.

Access to Electricity — World ranking (2023)
Rank Country Value
1 Andorra 100 % of population
2 United Arab Emirates 100 % of population
3 Antigua and Barbuda 100 % of population
4 Albania 100 % of population
5 Armenia 100 % of population
6 Argentina 100 % of population
7 Austria 100 % of population
8 Australia 100 % of population
9 Aruba 100 % of population
10 Azerbaijan 100 % of population
210 Central African Republic 17.6 % of population
211 Malawi 15.6 % of population
212 Chad 12 % of population
213 Burundi 11.6 % of population
214 South Sudan 5.4 % of population
View full rankings

Global Trends

Global electricity access has expanded significantly over the last 2 decades, with hundreds of millions of people gaining connections. However, the rate of progress has slowed recently. While the world is moving toward universal access, current estimates show that approximately 660 million to 750 million people still lack basic power. A critical challenge is that population growth in specific regions is currently outstripping the pace of new electrical connections, particularly in parts of Africa. Progress was notably robust in Central and Southern Asia, where the access gap has been reduced by more than 90% since the early 2000s. Conversely, global shocks like the COVID-19 pandemic and energy market disruptions caused a temporary reversal in progress for the first time in 20 years. Decentralized renewable energy solutions, such as solar home systems, are now the fastest-growing method for reaching the most remote populations, currently providing power to millions who remain beyond the reach of traditional national grids.

Regional Patterns

Regional disparities remain the defining characteristic of global electricity access. Sub-Saharan Africa is currently the epicenter of the energy deficit, accounting for approximately 85% of the global population without power. While countries like Kenya and Ghana have seen rapid improvements, 18 of the 20 least-electrified nations are located in this region. In contrast, East Asia and South Asia have made historic strides, with large nations like India and Indonesia reaching near-universal access. The urban-rural divide continues to be a major factor; recent data indicates that 84% of people without electricity live in rural settings. While urban electrification is nearly universal in most parts of the world, reaching the final 10% of the global population involves overcoming the high costs of extending infrastructure to remote, low-income communities. Some fragile and conflict-affected states have actually seen access rates decline as infrastructure is damaged or maintenance is deferred.

About this data
Source
World Bank EG.ELC.ACCS.ZS
Definition
Percentage of population with access to electricity.
Coverage
Data for 214 countries (2023)
Limitations
Data may lag 1-2 years for some countries. Coverage varies by indicator.

Frequently Asked Questions

Azerbaijan's Access to Electricity was 100 % of population in 2023, ranking #10 out of 214 countries.

Between 1999 and 2023, Azerbaijan's Access to Electricity changed from 97 to 100 (3.1%).

The United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 7 aims to ensure universal access to affordable, reliable, and modern energy by 2030. While many regions are on track, current projections suggest that without accelerated investment, approximately 660 million people will still lack electricity by the deadline, primarily in Sub-Saharan Africa.

No, a connection does not ensure reliability. The standard binary indicator only tracks whether a connection exists. Many households in developing regions experience frequent blackouts or 'brownouts,' where the voltage is insufficient to run appliances. The Multi-Tier Framework was developed specifically to measure these issues of quality and duration.

Off-grid solutions like solar home systems and mini-grids are critical for reaching remote areas where extending the national grid is too expensive. Recent data shows these systems are responsible for a significant portion of new access in Africa and Asia, providing a faster and often more sustainable path to electrification.

Countries in Sub-Saharan Africa, such as South Sudan, Burundi, and Chad, currently record some of the lowest access rates, with less than 15% of their populations having power. In these nations, the gap is often widest in rural areas where infrastructure development has not kept pace with population growth.

Urban areas are easier and cheaper to electrify due to high population density and existing infrastructure. Rural areas present geographic challenges, higher costs for line extension, and lower average household incomes, making it difficult for utilities to recover the costs of expansion without significant government or international subsidies.

Access to Electricity figures for Azerbaijan are sourced from the World Bank Open Data API, which aggregates reporting from national statistical agencies and verified international organizations. The dataset is refreshed annually as new submissions arrive, typically with a 1–2 year reporting lag.