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Abstract Africa’s rapid urbanization and infrastructure expansion are driving demand for road lighting across the continent. However, the current knowledge regarding road lighting coverage is fragmented. Here, we employed high-resolution nighttime SDGSAT-1 satellite data, OpenStreetMap road network data, and population datasets to quantify rural road lighting coverage and disparities across scales. The results show that, on average, only 3.52% of rural roads are lit across the continent. Northern Africa (14.65%) exhibits markedly higher rural road lighting coverage than Central Africa (1.28%). Furthermore, the West, East, Central, and Southern African regions have rural road lighting coverage rates below 2.2%. At the national scale, Egypt has the highest road lighting rate at 22.81%, whereas Sierra Leone and Burundi have rates below 0.20%. Overall, our study reveals substantial inadequacies in rural lighting infrastructure across Africa and demonstrates the value of high-resolution nighttime data for monitoring infrastructure.
Li et al. (Mon,) studied this question.