Journal Design Engineering Masthead
African Structural Engineering | 19 July 2026

A Panel-Data Estimation of Power-Distribution System Reliability for Policy Formulation in Senegal (2000–2026)

I, b, r, a, h, i, m, a, S, a, r, r, ,, A, m, i, n, a, t, a, N, d, i, a, y, e, ,, M, a, m, a, d, o, u, D, i, o, p
Infrastructure PolicySystem ReliabilityPanel DataPredictive Maintenance
Panel-data analysis reveals a significant link between maintenance expenditure and reduced outage duration.
Regional heterogeneity in equipment degradation is a key driver of reliability disparities.
Findings advocate for a shift from blanket replacement to predictive, targeted maintenance policies.
Establishes a longitudinal econometric framework for infrastructure assessment in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Abstract

{ "background": "Chronic power outages and unreliable electricity supply remain significant impediments to economic development in many Sub-Saharan African nations. A robust, evidence-based policy framework requires precise, longitudinal measurement of distribution system performance, yet such analyses are often lacking.", "purpose and objectives": "This policy analysis aims to develop and apply a panel-data econometric model to quantitatively evaluate the reliability of Senegal's power-distribution infrastructure. The objective is to generate actionable evidence for prioritising investment and maintenance policies.", "methodology": "We employ a fixed-effects panel regression model, $R{it} = \\alphai + \\beta1 X{it} + \\beta2 Zt + \\epsilon{it}$, where $R{it}$ is the System Average Interruption Duration Index (SAIDI) for region $i$ in year $t$. Covariates include equipment age, maintenance expenditure, and climatic variables. Inference is based on heteroskedasticity-robust standard errors clustered at the regional level.", "findings": "The analysis identifies a statistically significant negative relationship between targeted maintenance spending and SAIDI. A 10% increase in such expenditure is associated with a 3.2% reduction in outage duration (95% CI: 1.8% to 4.6%). Regional heterogeneity in equipment degradation rates is a major determinant of reliability disparities.", "conclusion": "The reliability of the distribution network is highly responsive to strategic, data-driven maintenance investment. Current blanket-equipment replacement policies are less efficient than targeted interventions informed by panel-data analysis.", "recommendations": "Policy should shift towards a predictive maintenance regime, allocating resources based on panel-model outputs. A national reliability database should be established and mandated for all distribution licensees to enable continuous model refinement.", "key words": "power distribution, system reliability, panel data, policy formulation, infrastructure investment, predictive maintenance", "contribution statement": "This article provides the first application of a longitudinal econometric framework to assess power-distribution