Country ISO2
BO
|

GPOBA was instrumental in extending access to electricity to many remote communities, households and schools in Bolivia.

This video is one of several case studies in the State of Energy Access Report, supported by the World Bank’s Energy Sector Management Assistance Program (ESMAP).

Solar panels are an economical option for more than 360,000 rural Bolivian households in remote areas that are not easily reached by power lines."

|
activity

La Paz, Bolivia, July 24, 2007. The Minister of Development Planning of the Republic of Bolivia, Mr Gabriel Loza Tellería signed a US$5.2 million grant with the World Bank’s Global Partnership on Output-Based Aid (GPOBA) to help deliver access to renewable electricity to the rural poor in Bolivia. The grant is funded by the World Bank’s International Finance Corporation (IFC) and the United Kingdom’s Department for International Development (DFID), under the multi-donor trust fund, the Global Partnership for Output Based Aid (GPOBA), administered by the World Bank.

“The GPOBA project demonstrates the Government’s continued commitment to universal access to electricity and innovative solutions to help provide electricity access for the poor,” stated Carlos Felipe Jaramillo, World Bank Director for the Andean countries.

This project will provide affordable electricity to over 7,000 poor Bolivian households, micro-enterprises, schools and hospitals in remote and dispersed rural areas, through the installation of solar home systems, or SHS. The project will also pilot the provision of small pico-PV systems for about 2,000 very poor households.

“This project builds on the experience of the existing World Bank-financed Decentralized Infrastructure for Rural Transformation (IDTR) project, which is already working to deliver electricity to rural areas using SHS in 14 areas of the country,” said Susan Bogach, the project manager. The IDTR project, which was initiated in 2003, will result in efficiencies that will directly benefit the poor, since competitive bidding between private firms resulted in the provision of 30 percent more SHS for a fixed total subsidy than expected.

"GPOBA is a multi-donor World Bank administered trust fund whose aim is to test output-based aid (“OBA”) approaches, selectively scale-up these approaches, and disseminate the lessons learned. OBA involves targeted performance-based subsidies that are disbursed only after service providers have delivered the outputs which are agreed beforehand. The outputs in this GPOBA-funded SHS project include not only the installation of SHS and pico-PV systems, but also the development of a local market for parts and repairs. “This will help ensure the sustainability of the SHS scheme, which is important for GPOBA since although our subsidies are ‘one-off’, we want to ensure that the poor have access to a continued level of service into the future,” stated Patricia Veevers-Carter, Program Manager for GPOBA.

|
activity

The Bolivia Decentralized Electricity for Rural Access project has won a team award from the World Bank's Latin America and the Caribbean Region. 
 
The team was selected for its sustained dedication and success in achieving development results for poor households in Bolivia under very difficult conditions. 
 
The aim of the Bolivia project is to increase affordable access to electricity in rural areas.   GPOBA is supporting the project through a US$5.18 million grant which is helping to fund the installation of 7,000 solar home systems for dispersed rural households, schools, clinics, and micro and small enterprises. 
 
The team that won the award is also the team for the World Bank's Bolivia Decentralized Infrastructure for Rural Transformation program.  The following people were honored:
 
• Task team leader:  Susan Bogach;
• Core team:  Monica Claros,  Karen Bazex, Kilian Reiche, Iris del Valle Oliveros, Luis Vaca Soto; and
• Extended team:  Lucia Spinelli, Lourdes Consuelo Linares, Maria Lucy Giraldo, Bjorn-Soren Gigler, Dana Rysankova, Michel Kerf, Carlos Felipe Jaramillo, Patricia De la Fuente Hoyes, Monica Tambucho, Luis Tineo, Oscar Avalle. 

 

|Activity Status:
  • Sector
  • Country
    Region
  • Amount
  • Approval Date
    Closing Date
  • Donors

Overview

activity

While 90 percent of Bolivia’s urban homes are electrified, rural access to electricity remains below one-third. The Decentralized Electricity for Universal Access project aimed to increase rural access to electricity, as well as information and communications technologies via decentralized public-private partnerships that incorporate output-based aid subsidies. The project provided subsidies to private providers for the sale, installation and after-sale service and market development activities for solar home systems in rural households, micro-enterprises, schools and clinics. 

  • Sector
  • Country
    Region
  • Year Published

Bolivia is implementing an innovative public-private approach to increase rural electricity access to extremely remote areas via Solar Home Systems (SHS). Novel Medium-term Service Contracts (MSCs) balance the Government’s wish for sustainable service and maximum control with providers’ aim for minimal risk exposure. In 2005, 14 MSCs were successfully bid out to private service providers to minimize the subsidies paid against an ambitious set of provider obligations. The tender resulted in a 25-percent gain in number of new users.

OBApproaches12 Bolivia (253.21 KB)
  • Sector
  • Country
    Region
  • Year Published

The GPOBA project, which was approved in 2007, built on the experience of the Infrastructure for Rural Transformation (IDTR) project. It was comprised of grants totaling $5.2 million to support the provision of electricity under the framework of the Government’s universal access strategy. The grant recipient was the Ministry of Services and Public Works, with implementation by the Project Coordination Unit of the IDTR.