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Abstract:
Energy access is essential for economic and human development and is an important driver for the economic
development of a country. Access to modern forms of energy, especially electricity, becomes even more
important for the socio-economic development of rural areas (which lag behind urban areas in terms of
infrastructure development). “Full electrification” to achieve social and economic development goals (and SDGs) in Vietnam requires 24/7 electricity access for every household, family, farming settlement and local enterprise, even in rural communities. To achieve this
goal, the government of Vietnam has focused primarily on providing access by extending the centralised grid.
Approximately 98 % of households in both urban and rural areas of the country have been electrified through this
means, but electricity access to the remaining 2% of the population, predominantly located in regions with terrain unfavourable to grid expansion, has become a technoeconomic moot point. To this end, discussions have explored whether cost-effective, off-grid renewable energy (RE) alternatives could assist the electrification of these remaining populations and further drive the socioeconomic development of these population groups.