The International Energy Agency is sounding the alarm bells on electricity access. The tri-crises in the form of the pandemic, inflation, and the energy crisis have practically erased the gains in energy access in the last decades. Increasing prices for food and fuel are hurting the most vulnerable in the developing world where they also have the least capacities and capabilities to cope. According to the latest IEA data, the number of people around the world who live without electricity is set to rise by nearly 20 million in 2022, reaching nearly 775 million, the first global increase since the IEA began tracking the numbers 20 years ago. The rise is mostly in sub-Saharan Africa, where the number of people without access is nearly back to its 2013 peak. More about this: For the first time in decades, the number of people without access to electricity is set to increase in 2022