Vol. 1 No. 1 (2000)
Methodological Evaluation of Power-Distribution Equipment Systems in Uganda: A Panel-Data Estimation for Risk Reduction, 2000–2026
Abstract
{ "background": "Power-distribution infrastructure in many developing nations faces significant reliability and safety challenges due to ageing assets and operational stresses. A systematic, data-driven methodology for evaluating equipment performance and quantifying risk reduction is critically needed to inform maintenance and investment strategies.", "purpose and objectives": "This study aims to develop and apply a novel panel-data econometric framework to evaluate the performance of power-distribution equipment systems, with the objective of measuring the efficacy of recent interventions in reducing technical and operational risks.", "methodology": "A balanced panel dataset of technical performance indicators from substations and feeder lines was constructed. The core analysis employs a two-way fixed effects model, $Y{it} = \\alpha + \\beta X{it} + \\mui + \\lambdat + \\epsilon{it}$, where $Y{it}$ is the failure-rate index, $X{it}$ is a vector of intervention variables, and $\\mui$ and $\\lambda_t$ are unit and time fixed effects. Inference is based on robust standard errors clustered at the regional level.", "findings": "The model indicates a statistically significant reduction in the composite failure-rate index following targeted interventions. Specifically, the retrofitting of polymer insulators was associated with a 22% decrease in outage frequency (95% CI: 18% to 26%). System vulnerability to seasonal rainfall variations also diminished post-intervention.", "conclusion": "The methodological framework successfully quantifies the risk-mitigation impact of specific equipment upgrades. The results demonstrate that data-driven, targeted interventions can substantially enhance the resilience of distribution networks.", "recommendations": "Utilities should adopt panel-data estimation for continuous performance monitoring and prioritise investment in insulator retrofitting programmes. Regulatory frameworks should incentivise the collection and analysis of granular equipment-level data.", "key words": "power distribution, infrastructure resilience, panel data, fixed effects model, risk assessment, asset management", "contribution statement": "This paper provides a novel application of panel-data econometrics to power-system
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