Abstract

We live in a world that is completely dependent on energy; thus, humankind can no longer live without power. With electricity being the main form of energy today, this has increased the complexity of our life today. In Uganda, electricity generation is mainly through hydropower, which puts the country in the bottleneck of overdependence on one source of energy. There are many energy systems out there that the country can use to diversify its electricity generation. Therefore, the need to understand the level of development and utilization of various energy systems has been the underlying question for this present study. A comprehensive literature survey was conducted using electronic databases, including ScienceDirect, Wiley, Sage, Scopus, Taylor & Francis, and Google Scholar. The publications in the form of reports, conference papers, working papers, discussion papers, journal articles, book sections, and textbooks were considered in this study. In total, 11 energy systems, including human and animal energy, solid biomass (firewood), hydropower, wind, geothermal, solar, nuclear, peat, coal, petroleum, and nonsolid biomass (methanol, hydrogen, ethanol, biodiesel, and biogas), are described. The current and future development and utilization of these energy systems have been described. The challenges for developing and utilizing these systems were elaborated on, and the solutions for their challenges were presented. Hydropower from the Nile River, being the main river for large hydropower plant construction, is the dominant energy system in Uganda. Nuclear energy will be the salvation for the country’s electric energy supply in the near future. Therefore, Uganda needs to bet big on nuclear energy.

1. Introduction

Energy utilization is a prerequisite for both rural and urban communities’ development. Modern energy access is a contributing factor to the nations’ wealth growth [1]. Therefore, lack of energy access is normally termed energy poverty. Most sub-Saharan African countries lie under energy poverty with limited access to modern energy [2]. In Uganda, several policies have been put in place to alleviate energy poverty [3, 4]. For instance, there has been much analysis devoted to grid-connected distributed generation and rural electrification [5].

The global energy transition to 100% renewables by 2050 is ongoing, and Uganda is also in the race. This transition is not just science fiction but a demand for total leapfrogging into a sustainable future [6]. The main driver behind this is the need to combat climate change at all costs by reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions to attain Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) [79]. The renewable energy development is a clean energy innovation approach that can enable climate-compatible growth in sub-Saharan African countries [1012]. With the abundant and affordable resources in those countries, it is technically and economically practical that all power generation can be achieved using renewable energy resources by 2030 [1316]. It is estimated that the contributory cost of technologies to ensure access to electricity for all Ugandans by 2030 ranges between $0.63 and $1.24 billion [17]. In general, government leaders have much power to shape energy transition. With good government policy, this transition can be attained, but with bad policy, this will end up to be stories for many generations to come. For example, populist leaders have long dispensed energy endowments for just political gains without accomplishing main goals [18].

Renewable energy is the biggest source of energy that can channelize energy systems in the direction of sustainability and supply security [19]. However, some studies pointed out that renewables have geopolitical and geoeconomics implications [20]. Besides, renewable energy generation faces a number of challenges, including climate dependence, technological, and distribution problems [21]. Nonetheless, renewable energy capacity in Africa is forecasted to reach 169.4 GW by 2040 from 48.5 GW in 2019, but this requires reevaluation (life cycle analysis) of the environmental impacts of renewable energy on the continent to inform mitigation decisions [22]. Hence, approaches to providing sustainable energy are not only the government leaders’ strategy but also endless efforts from academic and policy circles [23].

The availability of dependable energy plays an essential position withinside the social, economic, and cultural transformation of society. In the case of Uganda, the energy area has suffered long-status facet constraints that led to suppressed demand and outages [24]. Long-term energy demand forecasting is crucial for any country, in particular for developing countries with rapid development of energy needs [25]. In this line, Uganda continues to politically and economically reform its energy sector, including a new legal and regulatory framework, based on which the previously vertically integrated monopoly, Uganda Electricity Board, was unbundled leading to public private partnerships. The Uganda government allows an enabling environment for private sector investments in generation and distribution of electricity, while transmission above 33 kV stays a public function via Uganda Electricity Transmission Company Ltd. (UETCL). The Electricity Regulatory Authority (ERA) was established to oversee the operations of all electricity operators, and the Rural Electrification Agency (REA) was launched to ensure that rural electrification is accelerated to accomplish preset electricity distribution targets in rural areas [26]. In the battle for increasing access to clean and renewable energy as well as accelerating electricity access to the unserved rural population in Uganda, the government of Uganda has licensed nine electricity distribution companies, including Kilembe Investments Limited, Hydromax, Pader-Abim Community Multi-Purpose Electric Cooperative Society, Uganda Electricity Distribution Company, Umeme Uganda Limited, West Nile Rural Electrification Company, Kyegegwa Rural Energy Cooperative Society, Bundibugyo Electricity Cooperative Society, and Kalangala Infrastructure Services Limited [27].

Currently, Uganda has a total of 24 power plants that produce and supply electricity to the national grid. These include 4 large hydropower plants and 11 small hydropower plants (1023.59 MW), 2 thermal or heavy fuel oil power plants (100 MW), 5 bagasse-based cogeneration power plants (63.9 MW), and 2 solar PV power plants (60 MW). To this end, there is no wind power share to the total national installed capacity. The distribution of electricity in Uganda has expanded enormously in over two decades, with legally grid-connected customers rising from 180,000 in 2001 to 1,643,288 in 2020, including off-grid clients. However, the country has an electricity import capacity of 20.5 MW from two power plants in the neighboring countries [28].

Uganda owns abundant energy resources, which are fairly distributed throughout the country [29]. These include hydro, biomass, solar, geothermal, peat, and fossil fuels with petroleum in an estimated amount of 6.5 billion barrels, of which 1.4 billion barrels are recoverable, which has been discovered in the western part of the country. However, currently, the country’s electricity generation is mainly through hydropower. This alone is not sufficient to supply the whole population in the country, making electricity prices expensive besides other factors such as oil price fluctuation and the exchange rate [30]. Electricity in Uganda is not the most expensive but also not the cheapest compared to other sub-Saharan African countries [31, 32]. In 2018, Uganda’s electricity price was below Rwanda’s and Kenya’s tariffs but above the tariff of Tanzania, South Africa, and Ethiopia [33]. Ang et al. [34] reported that highly volatile oil prices and unprecedented weather fluctuations have acted as significant shocks for electricity generation, influencing electricity pricing. Moreover, petroleum resources bring their own problem as it is very difficult for developing countries like Uganda to balance their economic development needs and contribution to combating climate change [35]. The rising electricity price in the country brings a great challenge to the consumers, especially the large industrial consumers. However, Ai et al. [36] urged that increasing electricity price has a good side in that it could force enterprises to carry out technological innovation and improve the efficiency of energy utilization. For instance, Uganda is planning to adopt an electricity prepayment billing system (EPBS) as an intervention to reduce nontechnical energy losses [37].

Rural electrification schemes, also known as distributed generation, often focus on generating power for electric lighting and, more recently, phone charging [38]. In most sub-Saharan African countries, the rural electrification is strengthened through the formation of rural electrification development initiatives [39]. Moreover, a number of organisations or initiatives, such as GIZ and GETFiT, play a great role in promoting energy access to the local community [40]. In this regard, regional and international cooperation can standardize electricity access benchmarks and facilitate technology transfer through existing or more improved instruments [41]. For example, a number of project developers are present in sub-Saharan African countries with a focus on the mitigation of carbon footprint. These project developers are classified into neodevelopmental (in Tanzania) or liberal neodevelopmental (in Uganda) [42].

The government intervention is of paramount importance for reducing electricity and petroleum prices. Particularly in rural areas, through the rural electrification program, the price of electricity is reduced, and the suppliers are compensated. This is done through a subsidy policy [43]. Moreover, incorporating the heterogeneous nature of price elasticities into pricing policy can help decrease electricity demand-supply mismatch and inequality in electricity consumption [44]. In most developing countries, electricity pricing is determined by the mechanism called Automatic Tariff Adjustment [45, 46]. On the other hand, petroleum prices are very flexible since Uganda does not refine its oil though there is a large amount of crude oil deposit. It has to export the crude oil and import the refined ones, and thus the price structure will depend on many factors, including transportation, pandemic, and inflation [4749]. For instance, the COVID-19 pandemic led to an oil price shock, which hit oil-exporting developing countries as well as the importing countries [50]. Raghoo and Surroop [51] cited that transportation and taxation policies are the major parameters for determining petroleum prices.

With electricity being the main form of energy today, it has increased the complexity of life today. In Uganda, electricity generation is mainly through hydropower which puts the country in the bottleneck of overdependence on one source of energy [52]. However, there are many energy systems out there (such as solar and biomass) that the country can use to diversify its electricity generation. Therefore, the need to assess the level of development and utilization of various energy systems has been the underlying question for this present study which has not been addressed by the previous studies (Table 1). The contributions of this paper are threefold: (i) describing the current status, (ii) discussing the challenges and mitigation, and (iii) providing the future trends of energy systems development and utilization in Uganda. The present paper is structured as follows: Sections 213 present the review of the different energy systems. Section 14 provides a brief discussion on each energy system. Section 15 concludes the paper.

2. Methodology

In this study, a critical and comprehensive literature search was conducted to uncover the current status of energy systems utilization and development in Uganda following the procedures used by previous studies [6466]. The published literature in the forms of book sections, conference papers, peer-reviewed journal articles, theses, dissertations, reports, white papers, discussion papers, and working papers. The more general Google search engine was used to obtain scholarly, nonscholarly, and business published literature. Electronic databases such as Google Scholar, Science Direct, Wiley, Taylor & Francis, and Springers were used to narrow the search for scholarly articles and book sections or chapters. The search terms employed include “Hydropower and Uganda,” “Human energy and Uganda,” “Animal energy and Uganda,” “Wind energy and Uganda,” “Solar energy and Uganda,” “Peat energy and Uganda,” “Nuclear energy and Uganda,” “Geothermal energy and Uganda,” “Nonsolid biomass energy and Uganda or biogas and Uganda or co-generation and Uganda,” “Solid biomass energy and Uganda or wood fuel and Uganda,” “Petroleum energy and Uganda,” “Coal energy and Uganda,” and “ethanol and Uganda.”

3. Human and Animal Energy

3.1. Current State of Utilization

In Uganda, human and animal power still contribute a significant proportion of the energy used in the rural areas. The technologies include merry-go-round generators in schools, hand crank lighting in hospitals and health clinics during electricity outages, and bicycle generators for off-grid businesses. They are the most important energy sources for the population and are the largest single contributor to renewable energy sources [67]. Figure 1 clearly demonstrates the concept of harnessing animal power as an input-output block diagram.

The human and other animals’ energy is largely employed in agriculture, crop processing, transportation, construction and fabrication work, and industrial manufacturing process (operating machines). Agriculture still dominates the proportion of human and animal power, followed by transportation (Table 2) [68], whereby human and animal power is the elementary level of mechanizing agricultural and forestry operations. These agricultural operations include, but not limited to, the following: clearing of vegetation/stubble, including cutting trees (machetes, axes, hand, and chain saws), land preparation and soil manipulation (blade and tined hoes and pickaxes), seeding or planting (broadcasting by hand or seed fiddle, dibbling, jab planting, and use of single or multirow seeders), weeding (weeding hoes and cultivator weeders), fertilizer and manure application, crop protection (manual or power knapsack sprayers and dusters), harvesting (scythes, sickles, knives, drags, forks, and rakes), processing and preservation of food and feed (baling, mechanical threshing, manual and mechanical shelling, and grinding), transportation (head or shoulder load, backpack, handcarts, and bicycles), and other secondary tasks such as operation of hand and treadle pumps to lift water. Generally, human energy is a forgotten power option and, if implemented in countries with average electrical power consumed below 20 W/capita, would have a direct impact on human development [69].

3.2. Challenges and Their Possible Mitigation

Despite the fact that human and animal power is the most common energy used by the people in Uganda, they have some drawbacks. The cost of the improved technologies is a significant barrier to human and animal power adoption. For instance, many people in the villages are carrying loads on their heads or backs, which means that rural people are unable to afford simple technologies such as wheelbarrows, handcarts, bicycles, and animal-drawn carts. Secondly, there is high isolation of those who would benefit most from the introduction of more efficient hand, and animal-powered technologies are also a major factor influencing the steps in a successful technology transfer process [68].

The following can be possible mitigation for human and animal power drawbacks [71]: (i) proper tools to harness the power of humans and animals, (ii) appropriate and sufficient feed to ensure health and growth, as well as energy for work, (iii) adequate healthcare and prompt provision of veterinary services in case of injuries and sickness to aid in resistance to disease, (iv) appropriate well-fitting equipment for working, prevention of injury while working, and so on, (v) prevention of overstraining, allowing human and animals to rest from work while sick or injured, and avoiding putting animals to work in adverse ambient conditions, (vi) ensuring observance of laws to prevent the misuse and abuse of draught animals, (vii) use of modern equipment and methods for surgical treatments and slaughter, (viii) allowing animals the freedom to satisfy natural instincts, adoption of human methods for nose-roping, shoeing, branding, and dehorning, and so on, and (ix) development of publicity and education programmes by animal welfare organisations.

3.3. Future Trends

There is a dire need to increase the energy supply of those who rely on traditional energy sources in order to improve their quality of life and reduce the drudgery and hardship of everyday life. Human and animal energy is the forgotten renewable source of energy that is environmentally friendly and sustainable energy supply system. However, the technologies used to harness this system are simple and reliable but need much attention [72]. There is a need to foster agricultural productivity by heightening the electricity access to rural populations through rural electrification development [73].

4. Solid Biomass Energy

4.1. Current State of Utilization

In Uganda, the use of low-grade forms of energy (especially traditional or solid biomass fuels) accounts for more than 90% of total energy consumption. With a large number of refugees in the country, energy supply is so limited, especially energy for cooking (firewood) [29]. Solid biomass can be classified into processed and nonprocessed biomass as depicted in Figure 2. The use of nonprocessed biomass sources of energy or solid biomass (i.e., crop residue and wood fuel) illustrates energy poverty among households [74]. In addition, wood fuel is used extensively for process heat and to fuel brick-burning, tea drying, cement, titles, and lime production. The major sources are hardwood plantations, which consist of eucalyptus (50%), pine trees (33%), and cypresses (17%). The current available sustainable wood biomass supply is about 26 million tons. The annual theoretical potential production of agriculture residue ranges from 1.186 million to 1.203 million tons. The only subsector that utilizes biomass residues for electricity production yet is the sugar industry [29, 30].

It is estimated that 3 billion people, most of whom live in Asia, Africa, and the Americas, rely on solid fuels (i.e., wood, crop wastes, dung, and charcoal) and kerosene for their cooking needs. Over 700 million people in sub-Saharan Africa depend entirely on solid biomass fuels, especially unprocessed ones, and use simple or traditional cookstoves in poorly ventilated kitchens, which results in high indoor concentrations of household air pollutants such as fine particulate matter, carbon monoxide, and Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs)[7578]. Exposure to household air pollutants from burning this unprocessed biomass is associated with several health problems as well as premature [79, 80].

Processing solid biomass into charcoal has been one of the strategies to provide less emission cooking fuel for urban people. However, charcoal production from the forest is often not effectively regulated and thus contributes to forest degradation, deforestation, and GHG emissions, as well as climate change [81]. Moreover, charcoal also has adverse health effects on household users [82]. Despite the efforts to minimize deforestation, forests will continue to be a critical source of domestic energy for households in developing countries [83, 84]. Therefore, there is a need for a cheap and efficient fuel alternative that can be easily adopted by the local population such as carbonized briquettes from agricultural residues and torrefied pellets from MSW [85, 86]. Besides, a transformative new approach to facilitate access to affordable, reliable, sustainable, and modern energy for cooking by leveraging rapid progress in rural electrification or distributed generation and falling prices of solar PV and lithium-ion batteries for battery-supported electric cooking is inevitable [87]. Furthermore, strategies for reforestation, dissemination of improved cookstoves, relieving supply side constraints for modern fuels, and staggered payment options to lower the cost of entry for modern fuels are better solutions to overdependence on the solid biomass for households’ cooking [88, 89].

4.2. Challenges and Their Possible Mitigation

Firewood or wood fuel is the main source of heating and cooking in rural and urban areas. The high demand for fuel wood has resulted in the depletion of forests and exacerbates land degradation. This type of energy source is associated with higher levels of indoor pollution, time allocations especially by women and children for its collection, unreliability of supply, and local environment degradation. The use of firewood is therefore a detrimental factor in welfare improvement and constraint to the achievement of all the eight Millennium Development Goals [90].

The above challenges can be mitigated by the use of an alternative energy source or processed wood fuels such as charcoal, briquettes, and other agricultural residues, which are very important for reducing overreliance on firewood [91]. The charcoal is typically produced in low-efficiency Earth kilns in rural areas, and high losses are experienced throughout the value chain. LPG, natural gas, and electricity are used mostly by the high-income groups, normally in urban areas [92]. However, massive use of these energy sources can end energy poverty in the country [93]. With these regards, it can be noted that energy use varies considerably depending on income and geographical location of the household. Promotion of waste as a business by the government to accelerate the processing of biomass wastes (value addition) for household cooking [94].

4.3. Future Trends

The efficiency of the traditional and institutional cook stoves is being improved to reduce the consumption of firewood. Moreover, the efficiency rates in terms of energy consumption industries such as tea, tobacco, lime, and brick-making are being improved. Importantly, the key tool for this is the energy audits to identify potential measures to improve energy efficiency. Generally, a sustainable national grid and small-scale solutions like efficient biomass stoves, biochar, gasifiers, and biogas installations are highly recommended for future development as a lucrative approach for securing sustainable and clean energy in Uganda [95].

5. Hydropower Energy

5.1. Current State of Utilization

There are three kinds of hydropower generation plants: (i) run-of-river, where the power is generated by the flow of a river, (ii) reservoir, where the power is generated by the release of stored water, and (iii) pumped storage, where stored water is backed up into the reservoir in order to be pumped again [96, 97]. Small-scale hydropower stations are typically of the run-of-river type, while the large hydropower plants are of the reservoir type [98]. The large hydropower potential in Uganda along River Nile is estimated at about 2000 MW. With only 380 MW developed at Nalubaale and Kiira and 250 MW under development at Bujagali, the unexploited potential is well over 1300 MW. Table 3 shows the seven (7) operational large hydropower plants along River Nile, River Mahoma, and River Achwa, with a total capacity of 926 MW [99]. In Uganda, most of the hydropower projects are mainly commissioned by the private investors, for example, independent power projects and emerging Chinese-funded projects [100].

Small hydropower (<20 MW) projects are mainly not on the Nile River and have not been fully exploited. These are important sources of electricity for areas not covered by the national grid. Even though the cost per unit of electricity from isolated small hydropower plants may be higher than that from the national grid, they could sustainably contribute to poverty reduction in households in isolated areas. Table 4 shows the small hydropower sites available for development in Uganda. There are currently 25 small hydropower plants that are operational with a total capacity of 195.5 MW.

5.2. Challenges and Their Possible Mitigation

In this section, the challenges and mitigations for hydropower development in Uganda have been described. Hydropower projects require huge initial investment costs because of civil engineering work cost, equipment cost, land compensations costs, and transmission system cost [102, 103]. In order to minimize these challenges, the engineering hydropower policy in Uganda should consider large dam projects with a smaller reserve surface area in comparison with power generated [104, 105].

Further, the low human and institutional capacities to manage design, construction, and management of hydropower plants are another barrier to hydropower plant development in Uganda. This can be reduced by developing local capacity in order to minimize dependency on costly foreign expatriates; conditions should be set in the agreements with hydropower developers to train local manpower to manage the hydropower plants, and clear deadlines should be established when the local manpower should take over from the foreign expatriates. Furthermore, specialized curriculums in collaboration with industrial partners should be developed by Uganda’s Universities in energy technologies with a focus on hydropower and other energy resources in the country [106, 107].

In addition, there is high resistance to hydropower projects from the community because hydropower development process is considered a threat to livelihoods, ecosystem, and biodiversity as it brings about human displacement and natural resources degradation [108]. To solve the problem, the government of Uganda needs to establish a clear and well-defined resettlement plan for natives that are to be displaced by the establishment of hydropower generation plants. The resettlement plan should be discussed by the affected populace and the project development partners to come up with a win-win resolution [109, 110].

Lastly, hydropower generation depends on the run-of-river water, which has a direct relationship with the amount of water entering and leaving the rivers. Climate change has a major impact on the electricity infrastructure in the country due to weather extremes like floods that damage hydropower spillways and damage the electricity transmission infrastructure [111, 112]. Additionally, reduced inflow flow due to climate change has led to the failure of many hydropower projects [113, 114]. Ugandan rivers are being tapped into reservoirs as a resource for the generation of hydropower through the construction of dams, which becomes competitive with other uses such as irrigation, freshwater for households, and fishing [115]. This can be minimized by considering a massive investment in small- and medium-scale hydropower instead of large-scale hydropower generating plants. This is because the small hydropower plants depend on lower water levels to run turbines and hence are less affected by reduced water levels. Therefore, it is very important to forecast the water level using software and other advanced forecasting tools [116, 117].

5.3. Future Trends

In order for the country to meet its energy demand, many hydropower plants are under construction, and some are being proposed. So far so good. Five (5) large hydropower plants are under construction, while three (3) have been proposed with a combined capacity of 2514 MW as shown in Table 5. Five small hydropower plants (32 MW) are under construction, and twenty-seven (125.6 MW) have been proposed as presented in Table 6 and Table 7, respectively, while thirteen (5.66 MW) are under preliminary studies, and some of them have no studies as depicted in Table 8.

6. Wind Energy

6.1. Current State of Utilization

Wind energy is not yet developed and is presently an unused resource in the country for electricity generation. However, the wind speeds thought to be commercially viable are found in Tororo, Pader, and Nakapiripirit Districts with average speeds ranging from 7 to 9 m/s at the height of 80 m. Nevertheless, the wind speed in most areas of Uganda is moderate, with average wind speeds in low heights (>10 m) between 2 m/s to 4 m/s. Therefore, the wind energy resource in Uganda is only sufficient for small-scale electricity generation and for special applications, such as water pumping, mainly in the Karamoja region [118]. The other current use of wind energy has been identified to be used for small-scale irrigation [120].

6.2. Challenges and Their Possible Mitigation

The following are the challenges hindering the wind energy development in Uganda and their mitigation approaches. There are currently insufficient wind resource data within the country, which is demanded by wind energy projects. These data should be consistent and reliable data from different locations within the country. In order to overcome this, there is a need to develop a wind energy data centre to collect and analyze wind data parameters across the country [27, 121]. Secondly, there are challenges regarding wind variability and intermittency, and this is a common natural occurrence in any geographical location across the world. This challenge affects power generated, may cause turbine faults, and can compound inaccuracies in load forecasting.

Development of wind power farms requires a skilled workforce for wind resource assessment, infrastructure installation, operation, and maintenance, especially in the implementation of large wind projects, which is currently lacking in the country. This can be minimized through capacity building, which can be achieved by deliberately advancing long-term capacity and technical know-how in wind power technologies through training, research, and development [121].

The technologies used for wind power generation and supply are very expensive. An initial cost of investing in wind power is approximately 80% of the total project costs. Additional costs are operation, maintenance, and insurance. The high investment cost can be minimized by a financial risk transfer approach. This constitutes instruments that transfer a proportion of the risk to public sector agencies and include Feed-in Tariffs (FiTs), subsidies, Feed-in Premiums (FiPs), auctions, green bonds, equity financing, and/or hard loans [27].

The volatility of wind energy interferes with the system’s capability to control electricity supply. The control of wind energy intermittency due to climate change is even more complex with weak grid infrastructure due to inexistent or sufficient high-power voltage transmission. Wind energy generation is categorized as nonsynchronous and is associated with instability effects on an electricity system due to low inertia levels. This weak infrastructure can be reduced by expanding grid infrastructure that could ease connectivity to the grid by independent wind energy producers, attract private investors, and broadly increase efficiency in the generation and distribution of electricity [122].

6.3. Future Trends

The wind energy development in Uganda has remained so low, and it is still being harnessed in a traditional manner such as windmill, winnowing, and many others. There is an effort to develop and install wind turbines in some of the selected sites across the country. This is aimed at achieving renewable energy to back up the hydropower energy, which is currently the dominant clean energy in the country.

7. Solar Energy

7.1. Current State of Utilization

In the current situation, only 28% of the population have access to electricity which is not even reliable in the country. However, Uganda presents a huge market potential for alternative technologies to provide electricity, such as solar energy and photovoltaic (PV) systems [123]. Solar energy is underutilized in the country, although this is slowly changing. Overall, the projected solar penetration in a different part of the country by the year 2021 was 6.1%, with the total annual energy estimated at 69.52 GWh [124]. The use of solar PV started in the 1980s and has been utilized for lighting, vaccine refrigeration in health centres, communications, and signaling for the railways and for telecommunication. In 2014, two 10 MW solar power stations (Tororo Solar Power Station and Soroti Solar Power Station) in the east of Uganda were licensed by the ERA [125]. There exist several PV solar panels with different market segments, including Pico and microsolar home system, solar home system, standalone institutional solar PV system, solar PV minigrids, and telecommunication and lighting PV solar systems that are being installed [126]. Pico and microsolar systems are mainly adopted by the locals in the villages where there is no national grid for electricity [127]. The other minigrid PV solar systems include Xsabo solar plant (20 MW) and Mayuge solar PV plant (10 MW). Among the different solar PV systems, rooftop solar PV systems emerged as the best option, followed by ground-mounted solar PV systems [128]. In the rural population, the electricity generated by the solar home PV systems is mainly used in household application such as cellphones, lighting, and radios [129]. Solar energy has been an attractive area of study among researchers in the recent past. Table 9 shows examples of studies on solar energy in Uganda.

7.2. Challenges and Their Possible Mitigation

The main challenge with solar energy is the environmental impact. Solar energy does not pollute air and water or cause greenhouse gases. It can have a positive, indirect effect on the environment. Using solar energy replaces or reduces the use of other energy sources that have larger negative effects on the environment. However, some toxic materials and chemicals are used to make the photovoltaic (PV) cells that convert sunlight into electricity. Some solar thermal systems use potentially hazardous fluids to transfer heat. Leaks of these materials can harm the environment and cause health effects to human beings and animals. However, environmental effects from solar energy technologies are usually minor and can be minimized by appropriate mitigation measures. The potential environmental burdens of solar energy are regularly site-specific, depending on the size and nature of the project. This can be minimized by proper site selection. The selected sites should not interfere with land farming and other land uses. Some of the mitigation strategies concerning community resistance and investments cost can be borrowed from the previous energy system such as hydropower and wind energy [27, 105].

7.3. Future Trends

With the need to achieve 100% renewable by 2050, Uganda will have to develop its solar energy four times the existing capacity [92]. This can be simply put as the need to use solar and other renewable sources of energy will be no more an alternative but a must-do thing in the near future. The government of Uganda has therefore started a partnership with the private sector energy providers that can build solar plants in Uganda and learn from them for the agreed duration of time. Solar hybrid system can be abetter energy techonology for Uganda in the near future [137, 138]. Therefore, the economic viability of solar hybrid systems needs to be investigated in the case of Uganda, for instance, floating solar PV and hydropower hybrid system, biogas-solar PV system, PV-storage-diesel generators, and many others [139]. Solar energy for thermal application plays great for postharvest management as it is used for drying [140]. Hence, the development and utilization of solar dryers should be expanded in rural Uganda. The use of software for hybrid system optimization [141] and long-term energy planning optimization model with integrated on-grid and off-grid electrification should be extensively researched [142].

8. Geothermal Energy

8.1. Current State of Utilization

The global geothermal energy market and utilization are constantly increasing with the US remaining the largest national market [143146]. The potential and status of geothermal energy development vary from country to country and region to region [147]. Uganda still has no geothermal energy in operation. Ever since the quest for geothermal potential in Uganda began, more than 40 geothermal sites have been studied for their prospect’s parameters like temperature, chemistry of reservoir, natural heat transfer, and fluid characteristics to identify specific project areas and prioritize those for more detailed investigation. So far so good, three major potential areas for geothermal energy have been discovered as detailed in Table 10 [118], while the latest site discovered is Panyimur geothermal, which is located in Pakwach District.

8.2. Challenges and Their Possible Mitigation

There are 10 challenges that hindered the geothermal development in Uganda: (1) land access barriers and competition, (2) diversification of Uganda’s energy mix, (3) large investment costs, (4) lack of awareness and information, (5) government policy, incentives and institutional challenges, (6) inadequate research and development, (7) inadequate human capacity and training, inadequate infrastructure to support geothermal energy development, (8) inadequate infrastructure to support geothermal energy development, (9) shortage of financial resources, and (10) sociocultural and environmental challenges [148, 149].

Several mitigation approaches have been proposed; however, most of the solutions to the challenges are similar to the other energy systems described earlier. Some of the countermeasures for the abovementioned challenges include financial and subsidy incentive to individuals and communities as well as private organisations for the development of the geothermal energy project and community participation/ownership of geothermal energy projects for security and infrastructure. Loan facilities can be sought from African Development Bank as well as the global environmental facility. Regular environmental audits and environmental systems strengthening and streaming to ensure proper use and restoration of existing ecosystem services [148].

8.3. Future Trends

Until now, all the studied prospects have not yet reached an exploration stage suitable for the targeting and drilling of deep exploration wells. Expected temperatures are suitable for electric power generation using ORC plants, subject to the confirmation of the existence of reservoirs suitable for industrial exploitation. Geothermal energy is one of the possible alternative renewable energy sources in Uganda, which could supplement other sources of energy. Therefore, the country is not giving up on it. The development of technology and skills to extract the geothermal energy from the sites discovered is in progress.

9. Nuclear Energy

9.1. Current State of Utilization

Nuclear energy is considered a valuable option for the decarbonization of power generation, as it is produced from noncarbon resources [150]. Therefore, it plays a major role in meeting the future global energy needs and mitigating the threat of climate change [151]. Uganda is among the African countries with a high potential for nuclear energy development because of the availability of uranium reserves [152155]. However, Uganda’s energy scenario is quite different from other African countries such as Ghana, Libya, and Egypt. It has a nuclear power potential of 24000 MW, but preliminary findings indicate that 50000 km2 of estimated uranium can be found around Buyende, Nakasongola, Mubende, Kiruhura, Buhweju plateau, and Lamwo. There is a need for proper investment planning by the government as the unit cost of developing 1 MW of nuclear energy is $6 million. However, the government efforts are to build a 1000 MW power plant in the medium term and 2000 MW in the long run. In total, the government is planning to invest in energy infrastructure and raise generation capacity to 3500 MW in the near future, and it also seeks to increase per capita consumption from the current 215 kWh to 674 kWh over the medium term [156]. This will be unprecedented energy reform in the country due to its abundance.

9.2. Challenges and Their Possible Mitigation

There are numerous challenges that are debarring atomic energy development in Uganda besides the danger and the fear of nuclear energy. These challenges include but not limited to the following as highlighted [157]: (i) There is a very high initial capital cost of building a 1000 MW nuclear power station in Uganda, averaging almost $6 billion (in 2020 dollars). (ii) There is insufficient public awareness of nuclear power development. Worse still, technical information is inadequate, and data is insufficient to accurately assess the availability and true potential of nuclear energy. (iii) There is strong competition with other energy sources. (iv) Uganda which has no policy on nuclear energy is not expected to have a waste management policy on nuclear wastes, which is quite dangerous for the country. (v) Nuclear technology is very complex and demanding that requires specialized knowledge and excellence in human performance, which has never been developed in the country. (vi) Another critical barrier to the development of nuclear energy development in Uganda is the absence of the enabling infrastructure (grid unreliability) in the form of transmission and distribution lines that can transmit electricity to remote places, and because of this limitation, they resort to rudimentary technologies used in most of the rural places in Uganda which are essentially small and very inefficient. (vii) Presently, there is limited research effort by the government of Uganda in nuclear energy. Notably, there is no nuclear energy research and development program that is reinforced with government funding. (viii) One of the most critical challenges is that politics and geopolitical risks are embedded in nuclear energy development [157159]. (xi) The fear of environmental concern related to nuclear energy production and uranium mining is among the challenges contributing to the delay of nuclear development in the country [160]. Further challenges of nuclear power development are well-elaborated by the previous studies: Adams and Odonkor [161] and Ansah et al. [162].

Several countermeasures to the challenges have been pointed out. These include the following: the government of Uganda may undertake an energy subsidy reform by transferring subsidies from fossil fuels to nuclear energy technologies. In addition, there is a need to regularize manufacturing processes in order to promote nuclear energy technology in Uganda. Most of the solutions, such as capacity building and feed-in-tariffs policies, are similar to other energy systems [163].

9.3. Future Trends

In the face of growing energy needs arising from the rapidly growing population, there is a need to find alternative clean, efficient, reliable, and affordable sources of energy in Uganda which can meet this need. As such, nuclear energy has been considered a good fit that could cover this unprecedented energy demand as well as soothing socioeconomic activities in the country [156].

10. Peat Energy

10.1. Current State of Utilization

Peat is the surface organic layer of soil, consisting of partially decomposed organic material, derived mostly from plants, which has accumulated under conditions of waterlogging, oxygen deficiency, acidity, and nutrient deficiency. Peatlands are areas of landscape, with or without vegetation, that have a naturally accumulated peat layer at the surface [164]. The peatlands area in Uganda is projected to be about 4000 km2, and the average thickness of peat deposits is estimated to be about 1.5 m, with the total peat volume to be 6000 million cubic metres, while the average dry bulk density is estimated to be around 100 kg/m3 and a net calorific value of 17 Giga Joules/tonnes while theoretically, peat volume corresponds to about 250 million tonnes of oil equivalent (Mtoe) [105]. Interestingly, peat energy can be a promising source of electricity for Uganda because peat-to-power technology is cost competitive compared to the electricity utility price [165].

10.2. Challenges and Their Possible Mitigation

The damaged peatlands in the country are already releasing almost 3.7 megatons of CO2 equivalent each year, which is very dangerous to the environment. Moreover, these emissions are likely to increase with further peatland deterioration as a result of climate change [166]. Generally, peatlands need more studies and long-term monitoring in relation to vegetation changes and corresponding ecosystem services such as GHG, water quality, and flooding. This is helpful in supporting further financial investment. Sharing good practice on peatland management and scientific information across peatland countries is an important objective [166].

10.3. Future Trends

Kabale Energy Limited is the first company entrusted by the ERA to undertake studies necessary for generation of approximately 33 MW using peat resource in Kabale District. Meanwhile, ERA is currently processing a permit extension application for the said project. There is hope that the total available peat resource volume will be adequate for generation of about 800 MW for the next 50 years. However, the available peat resources are dispersed mainly to Western and South-Western Uganda, where the desired characteristics are better than in other regions [118].

11. Coal Energy

11.1. Current State of Utilization

There is currently limited study on the existence, consumption, and production of coal in Uganda. This implies that there is no coal deposit and utilization in the country [167].

11.2. Challenges and Their Possible Mitigation

Coal production and uses in Uganda have not yet commenced; however, some challenges are attributed to the use of coal as derived from the coal dominant countries such as China and the USA [168].

Price inflation is a problem associated with coal in that depletion of the highest-quality, easiest-to-mine coal leads to higher prices. The price of delivered coal is also sensitive to oil price increases because diesel fuel is an important input for mining and transportation. Price inflation can be solved by the value diversity in fuels, technologies, and suppliers in integrated resource planning; this will reduce the tendency of overdependency on coal only by investing in solar, wind, and geothermal, among others [169].

Environmental constraints and costs are associated with meeting new pollution-control requirements. Environment pollutants such as GHG emission, particulate matter, and NOx due to coal mining and combustion has become a global concern since the world is eyeing carbon-free production and operation; therefore, new and pending environmental rules are expected to increase substantially the costs of operating existing or building and operating new coal plants, and some of the technologies are proposed to better manage emissions [170, 171]. Fully evaluate pollution-control investments for existing power plants and secure option values by evaluating practical options, investigating those that are most promising, and procuring those that produce the most value under the broadest range of plausible future conditions. This will prevent issues associated with environment pollution and global warming due to carbon emissions.

There is a health issue concerning the use and production of coal. Coal kills people and causes disease from coal-fired power plants causing 23,600 premature deaths, 21,850 hospital admissions, 554,000 asthma attacks, and 38,200 heart attacks every year. Additionally, coal kills jobs compared to other renewable energy sectors like wind and solar. In America, the wind sector employs more workers than the coal industry. Investing in wind and solar power would create 2.8 times as many jobs as the same investment in coal; mass transit and conservation would create 3.8 times as many jobs as coal [172]. Policy drivers like the introduction of stringent environmental and safety regulations are less favorable against coal but can help to reduce safety violation and hence decreases exposure to coal [173]. The more radical approach to mitigate the negative and harmful effects of coal usage is through cancelling new coal power plants [174].

11.3. Future Trends

Since there is no much information related to coal deposits in the country, the future trend will only rely on further exploration with technology that will be available in the future. With constant exploration, maybe one-day coal deposit can be found in the country.

12. Petroleum Energy

12.1. Current State of Utilization

Being a landlocked country, about 85% of Uganda’s petroleum imports are routed through Kenya and 15% through Tanzania [32]. However, commercially viable deposits of oil around Lake Albert in western Uganda were first discovered in 2006 [175]. Oil exploration and development in Uganda were triggered by the high international oil prices between 2004 and 2014 [176]. The late discovery of oil made Uganda becomes one of the region’s newest petrostates [177]. Therefore, this led to the creation of new legal frameworks for oil and gas in Uganda in 2013 to put in place local content policies [178]. The presence of oil in the country will gradually change the petroleum industry in the near future. The oil and gas development in Uganda is being championed as a key to a “better life” [179]. Nevertheless, the full exploitation of the deposits might require the construction of an export pipeline to the Indian Ocean coast at Tanzania or Kenya coastal areas, although other possibilities are being examined [180].

The transport sector is the major consumer of fossil fuels and accounts for about 75% of the fossil fuel import bill [32], while Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) (0.06%) and electricity (0.45%) make up a relatively small portion of overall household energy demand. Overall, the combined diesel and LPG contribute 3.2% of the sector’s energy consumption in the country. In general, households that use LPG consumed approximately 31% less charcoal than those not using LPG [181]. This illustrates the benefit of petroleum product utilization in minimizing overdependence on solid biomass [182]. Petroleum products have been used in several areas of application as illustrated in Figure 3.

12.2. Challenges and Their Possible Mitigation

Several challenges are hindering the development and utilization of petroleum energy. These include but not limited to the following: weak local government capacity for oil resource governance (Figure 4) and lack of industry-driven interaction with the local people [183]. The cost of investment in petroleum is too high, considering right from exploration and extraction to transportation, leaving alone refinery, which Uganda cannot handle with the current technology. For instance, the construction of Uganda section of the East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) will cost over USD $3.5 billion in total to transport crude oil from Hoima in the Albertine Graben region of Uganda to Tanga in Tanzania, a distance of 1443 km [184]. Besides, the construction of an oil pipeline can result in so many environmental and social impacts, including physical displacement, resettlement, economic displacement, disputed valuations, delayed compensation, livelihood disruption, food insecurity, uncertainty, fear, and anxiety [184].

The fear of environmental degradation (especially noise pollution, soil erosion, and wildlife disturbance) caused by oil and gas exploration activities is among the challenges for petroleum development [185]. Moreover, oil extraction is associated displacement of people living around the area of vicinity [186]. Next, the fear of petroleum pipeline fire and explosions, which can be catastrophic and lead to dangerous destruction of properties and loss of human and animal life, is also among the challenges [59].

Oil and gas development is associated with geopolitics [187]. Therefore, present oil in some countries is just a resource curse with endless instability [188]. In this regard, political leaders have a great influence on the success of petroleum development and utilization in the country. So, political leaders who are known to be bureaucrats can spend natural resource revenue in ways that entrench their political power but undermine longer-term economic development [188], hence, leaving their countries in constant and miserable energy poverty level. Therefore, greater stakeholder involvement can be helpful in alleviating the fears of shaping negative expectations and create conditions necessary to eradicate bureaucracy among the political leaders hence avoiding the energy resource curse [184, 189]. In addition, political and institutional innovation is inevitable to address the challenges related to oil development in the country [190]. Above all, some of the mitigation strategies of the challenges are similar to ones described in the case of the coal energy system.

12.3. Future Trends

Uganda started its oil extraction at Albertine, and the creation of a pipeline to Tanzania was proposed by the government. The government also plans to develop its own processing plant. Currently, the country is exporting unprocessed crude oil. Therefore, the future development will be to establish an oil refinery plant in the country. Recycling petroleum products such as polythene, PET bottles, and polypropylene into diesel can also be beneficial to the environment as well as increasing fuel supply in the country. This is attracting a number of researchers in the present days on how diesel fuel oil can be obtained from municipal plastic wastes, and it is efficient to use in transportation [191]. It can be concluded that the Uganda oil project is generally profitable and that deferring oil production is justified except in the cases where the net convenience yield or cost inflation is high [192]. The people mindset toward becoming a Petro-citizenship needs to be assessed because it might also affect petroleum development in the country [193]. Nevertheless, continuous discovery of oil deposits and estimation of available oil reserves is of great interest to the country [194].

13. Nonsolid Biomass Energy

13.1. Current State of Utilization

The nonsolid biomass energy includes liquid and gaseous biofuel such as biogas, bioethanol, biomethanol, biodiesel, and hydrogen as depicted in Figure 5. The transition from traditional biomass (wood and charcoal fuel) to modern biomass and biofuel production and consumption is a main focal area of the government to go green with sustainable energy systems by 2050 [195]. There are modern biomass energy systems called cogeneration which involves using biomass for general electricity as alternative energy [196]. So far, Kakira Sugar Works Limited and Kinyara Sugar Limited are generating electricity for sale to the national grid from bagasse, providing 12 MW and 5 MW, respectively, as of 2010. Generally, biomass cogeneration from agricultural wastes is seen to hold particular promise as a technology for the country. Biogas is among the most globally adopted biochemical conversion technologies for waste-to-energy technology [197, 198]. However, biogas digester distribution is still very limited in Uganda. The biogas implementation process started way back in the 1990s, and 50 digesters were installed in five districts (Iganga, Kabarole, Mbale, Mpigi, and Tororo) in the country by 2004 [105, 167]. There is also already power being generated from wood gasifiers at Muzizi Tea Estate (250 kW) and Mukono gasification system (10 kW) [199].

Besides biogas, ethanol production is also developing at a rapid pace. So far, there are three companies producing ethanol from several feedstocks. For instance, Kakira Sugar Works Limited in Jinja and the Sugar Corporation of Uganda Limited in Lugazi already have installed capacity to produce 35,000 and 60,000 liters of molasses ethanol per day, respectively. On the other hand, Kamtech logistics in Lira has installed a capacity of 4000 liters of cassava ethanol per day [200]. It is worth noting that the first-generation ethanol can be produced from feedstocks that contain sugar, for example, sugar beet, sugarcane, and molasses. However, it can also be obtained from starch crops such as maize, cassava, banana, and sweet sorghum. Contemplating biogas energy technology has been of interest to a number of researchers in recent years. Table 11 presents the examples of the previous studies on biogas energy in Uganda.

13.2. Challenges and Their Possible Mitigation

The challenges of the development and utilization of nonsolid biomass are quite similar to the previous energy systems. Moreover, the barriers to the wider implementation of biogas as a source of energy have been comprehensively reviewed by previous studies [209215]. However, some of the challenges include lack of technology and capacity building, high investment costs, and poor country’s regulation, policy, and standards. Similarly, the mitigation of these challenges can be adopted from the previously discussed energy systems.

13.3. Future Trends

The need for the future development and utilization of nonsolid biomass is so demanding as a strategy to address climate change. The country should expand the existing biogas plants to all villages. Gasification should be studied and adopted in the country because it is the technology that promises clean fuel to mitigate climate change and uses varieties of cheap and locally available feedstocks such as agricultural and agroprocessing residues and MSW [216218]. Biofuel or biodiesel, ethanol, and methanol production facilities should be developed or expanded since the country is very rich in biomass. There are a lot of underutilized agricultural and agroprocessing residues that need to be converted into useful resources. This has opened new ground for research in bioethanol production. For instance, a study has been conducted on bioethanol production from different matooke peels species [219]. The future clean energy that is going to change the country energy profile with less or no environmental concern is nonsolid biomass [220, 221]. Therefore, the country should plan to forget the traditional use of solid biomass.

For instance, biogas uptake among the community is still below average in most developing countries [222]. This calls for new thinking in biogas dissemination strategy and business model. Search for feedstocks for both biogas and gasification. Codigestion (two feedstocks) of mixed waste is also an attractive area of research, for example, biogas production from livestock manures and slaughterhouse waste [223]. Moreover, a recent study assessed the entrepreneurial potential and feasibility of developing a mobile system for purifying and bottling biogas in portable cylinders for wider society consumption and benefit. This could increase biogas energy supply and access in developing countries [201]. Therefore, extensive study is recommended in this area. Further, smart systems for monitoring the biogas production process are also attracting research today [224].

14. Discussions and Recommendations

Human and animal energy sources are still the most utilized energy sources in rural areas of Uganda. However, there is still a gap in its utilization. Unfortunately, many youths are currently unemployed and eventually waste resources on activities such as gambling or betting and leisure. In order to harness the power of humans and animals to the fullest, there is a need for proper technology and tools design. For instance, the mechanization of agriculture is one of the technologies required. By using proper technology and tools, human and animal energy can be sustainably utilized without making them drudgery.

The traditional cooking stoves that use firewood are still dominant within the rural population of Uganda. Overdependence on firewood as the source of energy has resulted in deforestation. Nonetheless, it is still a hurdle for the government to provide cheap fuel like firewood to the rural population in order to reduce the overreliance on firewood. Worst still, charcoal, a processed wood fuel, is being used among the urban people. This makes no difference in terms of deforestation, though it is cleaner than firewood with less or no smoke problem. Technology such as briquetting of agricultural residues and municipal wastes (MSW) can be a better solution to the overutilization of firewood. The use of other energy sources for cooking, such as LPG, biogas, electricity, and ethanol, is paramount important to minimize overdependence on firewood.

Hydropower is the hope and future for Uganda electricity, as nuclear, geothermal, and wind are still paperwork. River Nile is the miracle river for Uganda, where most of the large hydropower stations are constructed. The country’s overdependence on hydropower for electricity is indeed not very safe for the future. With so many challenges of hydropower, such as climate change and high investment and maintenance costs, the country will not meet electricity demand in the future. Therefore, Uganda should continue to explore and develop other energy sources for electricity.

Wind energy in Uganda is still a story with so many questions unanswered regarding whether it will be economically feasible to install the wind turbines in the sites identified or not. Wind energy requires a huge amount of land, which is not easy to be given out by the local people, and compensating all these people will require enormous capital investment costs. Nevertheless, a small wind farm can be established to supply the specific settlement without the need to connect to the national grid.

Solar energy from PV cells is currently being adopted by most people in villages. So many places where the hydropower national grid is not reaching are massively depending on solar PV electricity to power their electronic devices, lighting, and so many other uses. However, the application of PV electricity should be expanded, such as cooking, powering agricultural machines, and crop processing.

Geothermal energy in Uganda has not been developed, and it is still more paperwork. There is still much to be done to start harvesting geothermal energy. The competition with many cheaper energy sources such as hydropower and solar will not make geothermal energy come to life any time sooner. However, the country should not look down on geothermal energy because having diverse energy sources is essential for the sustainability of power utilization in the country.

Nuclear energy is the atomic energy of the future for Uganda. Nuclear is being feared and wanted at the same time. With the availability of large deposits of uranium, Uganda stands at the edge of developing nuclear energy in the near future. The only challenge is meeting the 19 nuclear energy infrastructure requirements, such as availability of safety regulation, nuclear waste storage, technologies, and skilled manpower. Despite the hurdle in overcoming the nuclear energy challenges, the country should never give up. This is because nuclear energy is the only energy that will reduce the country’s overdependence on hydropower for electricity.

Peat energy is a forgotten but very important energy source that can be harnessed cheaply. Uganda is blessed with large peatlands. Peat is not like coal or petroleum; in fact, it is between renewable and fossil fuel. That means it is not a full fossil fuel or renewable energy source. The utilization of peat will be a great opportunity for Uganda to diversify its energy sources which in turn will improve the overall sustainability of the energy sources in the country.

Coal energy, the black gold, is just a story for a country like Uganda. There are not many studies done on coal, so there is no idea of whether Uganda has a coal deposit or not. Importing coal from other countries such as Tanzania or DRC will be too expensive for the country to economically benefit from such an energy source. Nonetheless, it is better for the country to remain without coal utilization. This is because the utilization of coal comes with so many problems that the country might not handle.

Petroleum energy is still the only single energy system for the transportation industry in Uganda. Petroleum is just full of geopolitics, and thus, the main challenge with its utilization. Uganda being a landlocked country suffered from the importation of petroleum, making the transportation industry unstable in terms of fare. The rise in transport costs is then directly linked to the prices of commodities. The newly crude oil mining at Albertine is now the hope for the country as much as it is being exported for processing. For a country to be self-sufficient in the oil field, it has to develop its own processing plants with all the technologies and human skills required. This is the only way the country can be independent of itself.

Lastly, nonsolid biomass such as hydrogen, biofuel, biogas, ethanol, and methanol are very clean and renewable energy sources that the country should bet big on them. For instance, biogas can be an alternative to firewood for cooking as well as LPG. Gasification of the agricultural residues and MSW is also potential technology that can be used for cooking and transportation (hydrogen gas). So far so good; the country is trying to develop and install biogas and ethanol plants. However, the country should also look at biomass gasification or even cogasification with MSW. Gasification of MSW offers more potential than energy recovery from MSW incineration [225]. Cogasification is vitally important because it is the technology that will solve both energy and environmental problem. In these regards, researches are required to understand the suitability of biomass gasification in the country, and also studies are needed to gain insight into the cogasification process of several feedstock combinations.

15. Conclusion

The present study successfully reviewed energy systems in Uganda. Human and animal energy is the forgotten renewable energy that needs to be harnessed sustainably to avoid drudgery. Hydropower is still the alpha and omega for the country as far as electric power is concerned. There is a need for the country to diversify its energy systems for electricity generation. Thus, the only hope for the country future electricity generation is from atomic energy (nuclear energy). Though it is not a renewable energy source, nuclear energy will be very vital to minimize the country overdependence on hydropower. Many energy systems are still underdeveloped or underutilized. Geothermal, wind, peat, and nuclear energy systems are still in an early stage of development and are not utilized. However, there is a plan for the development to reach the utilization stage in the near future. Solar energy and biogas energy are the most studied energy systems in Uganda in the academic literature. Thermochemical processing of biomass and nonbiomass wastes into syngas or hydrogen is becoming a more attractive area of research today, as there is a rising need to produce clean hydrogen with reduced production and raw material cost. Bioethanol energy is one of the adopted nonsolid biomass energies in Uganda; however, its application for transportation in the country is still limited compared with other developed nations. The present study has not covered in detail the technologies used for harvesting or harnessing these energy systems. Therefore, further study is required to review the technologies behind the energy systems utilization, and the impact of these technologies on energy development and utilization should be investigated. In addition, several energy systems were not covered in this paper. Particularly, the tidal, wave, battery, fuel cells, hybrid, and gravity energy storage systems need to be investigated for their utilization and development in the country.

Data Availability

Research data underlying the findings of the study are included in the paper.

Disclosure

The preprint version of this manuscript was deposited at the MDPI Preprints server at https://www.preprints.org/manuscript/202202.0361/v1 [226].

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare that there are no conflicts of interest regarding the publication of this paper.

Acknowledgments

The authors acknowledge the financial support from the Africa Center of Excellence II in Phytochemical, Textile and Renewable Energy (ACE II-PTRE).