>When night falls in Akanu in southeast Nigeria, the streets are lit. That’s something people in the rural settlement of 100,000 haven’t seen since 2020, when access to the national grid in the area broke down and was never repaired.
>For Mercy Kalu, who runs a roadside restaurant, shop and bar, business is booming. “Our people go to bed early, like fowl, when there is no light,” she says. Now “people go to their farms in the day and come here in the night to pick up their soap, cream, sachet water and soft drinks. What I used to sell in a week, I can sell in three days.”
The environmental aspect of Solar gets a lot of talk, for good reason. But the biggest victory of solar, in my opinion, is liberating people from incompetent government. People don’t have to wait to connect to the grid; they can power their own homes, their own businesses. It starts a virtuious cycle where business grows, which means they can make more energy, which means they can power new things
lAljax on
The over capacity of Chinese solar PV production will do more for decarbonization than 10 Paris accords. Same goes for batteries.
For western countries it still is important to have their own industry, since they found inverters with remote controls trusting Chinese PV panels might be a energy security risk, but for non aligned countries in Africa and Latin America this might be a generational opportunity to build up power generation at diminished cost.
abrookerunsthroughit on
!ping ECO
Dibbu_mange on
I lived in rural West Africa for 2 years without electricity. For the first year, I just cave man moded. Second year, I shelled out for a fancy solar setup. It was awesome. During the day, it was indistinguishable from having electricity back home in the US. At night, I could mostly only run lights from battery, but that was better than just going to sleep at 8 pm.
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>When night falls in Akanu in southeast Nigeria, the streets are lit. That’s something people in the rural settlement of 100,000 haven’t seen since 2020, when access to the national grid in the area broke down and was never repaired.
>For Mercy Kalu, who runs a roadside restaurant, shop and bar, business is booming. “Our people go to bed early, like fowl, when there is no light,” she says. Now “people go to their farms in the day and come here in the night to pick up their soap, cream, sachet water and soft drinks. What I used to sell in a week, I can sell in three days.”
The environmental aspect of Solar gets a lot of talk, for good reason. But the biggest victory of solar, in my opinion, is liberating people from incompetent government. People don’t have to wait to connect to the grid; they can power their own homes, their own businesses. It starts a virtuious cycle where business grows, which means they can make more energy, which means they can power new things
The over capacity of Chinese solar PV production will do more for decarbonization than 10 Paris accords. Same goes for batteries.
For western countries it still is important to have their own industry, since they found inverters with remote controls trusting Chinese PV panels might be a energy security risk, but for non aligned countries in Africa and Latin America this might be a generational opportunity to build up power generation at diminished cost.
!ping ECO
I lived in rural West Africa for 2 years without electricity. For the first year, I just cave man moded. Second year, I shelled out for a fancy solar setup. It was awesome. During the day, it was indistinguishable from having electricity back home in the US. At night, I could mostly only run lights from battery, but that was better than just going to sleep at 8 pm.