Sub-Saharan Africa is still far behind in its ability to generate
electricity, hampering growth and frustrating its ambitions to catch up
with the rest of the world.
All of
sub-Saharan Africa’s power generating capacity is less than South
Korea’s, and a quarter of it is unproductive at any given moment because
of the continent’s aging infrastructure. The World Bank estimates that
blackouts alone cut the gross domestic products of sub-Saharan countries
by 2.1 percent.
This dismaying picture was echoed in the annual
report of the Africa Progress Panel, released in June. Former U.N.
Secretary General Kofi Annan heads the panel. The report foresees
electricity coming to all homes and businesses in Africa – by 2080.
Graca
Machel, a member of the panel and the former wife of Nelson Mandela,
said she was taken aback by the prospect of a 65-year wait for
electricity. The report also estimated that an investment of 55 billion
dollars would be needed yearly to achieve universal access.
Presenting
the report at the World Economic Forum Africa in Cape Town, titled
“Power People Plant: Seizing Africa’s Energy and Climate Opportunities,”
Annan noted that some African countries are already leading the world
in low-carbon climate-resilient development.
“African countries do
not have to lock into high-carbon old technologies; we can expand our
power generation and achieve universal access by leapfrogging into new
technologies,” he said.
However, he cautioned that Africa’s energy
challenge was substantial. “Over 600 million people still do not have
access to modern energy. It is shocking that Sub-Saharan Africa’s
electricity consumption is less than that of Spain and on current trends
it will take until 2080” to catch up.
Modern energy also means
clean cooking facilities that don’t pollute household air, he went on.
“An estimated 600,000 Africans die each year as a result of household
air pollution, half of them children under the age of five. On current
trends, universal access to non-polluting cooking will not happen until
the middle of the 22nd century.”
Africa has enormous potential for
cleaner energy – natural gas and hydro, solar, wind and geothermal
power – and should seek ways to move past the damaging energy systems
that have brought the world to the brink of catastrophe.
The waste
of scarce resources in Africa’s energy systems remains stark and
disturbing. Current highly centralised energy systems often benefit the
rich and bypass the poor and are underpowered, inefficient and unequal.
Energy-sector
bottlenecks and power shortages cost the region 2-4 per cent of GDP
annually, undermining sustainable economic growth, jobs and investment.
They also reinforce poverty, especially for women and people in rural
areas.
“Changing
this is a huge investment opportunity. Millions of energy-poor,
disconnected Africans, who earn less than US 2.50 a day, already
constitute a US 10-billion yearly energy market.”
The panel is an
advocacy group which lobbies for sustainable development in Africa and
which was originally established to monitor whether the world’s leaders
were meeting their commitments to Africa.
from here
As we would expect this is presented from a capitalist point of view - there is first and foremost always consideration of the prospect of profit to be made - even though electricity could benefit the lives of huge numbers of people in the area. As is acknowledged new technology is available and quality of life could be improved considerably - and the big hang up? The economic aspect. Imagine a world of free access to the means of production in which requirements like these can be fulfilled promptly. Imagine the knock on effects of improved health and well being. Imagine a world socialist society.
Commentary and analysis to persuade people to become socialist and to act for themselves, organizing democratically and without leaders, to bring about a world of common ownership and free access. We are solely concerned with building a movement of socialists for socialism. We are not reformists with a programme of policies to patch up capitalism.
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