Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Everyone’s waiting for ‘asli bijli’ now

Homes that get electricit­y from microgrids often complain that ‘chhoti bijli’ can only power a mobile phone or a onewatt bulb

- Gayatri Jayaraman gayatri.jayaraman@hindustant­imes.com ■

Activist Sunanda Patwardhan was in her office in interior Jawhar district, one morning last year, when a local Warli woman angrily demanded to see her. She had just returned from Mumbai and what she had witnessed left her incensed. “Two-three fans in one room, tubelights, many bulbs, moving pictures, mixer, fridge, washing machine, everything can run on their grids, and ours? Even the light that comes from our bulbs is weak,” she fumed.

Patwardhan tried to console her, saying she would have to pay more than the flat rate she paid now for electricit­y. “I don’t know all that. What I do know is we are being given less and they are being given more. Tai (sister), you fix it,” she said as she stormed off.

Patwardhan smiles. “She knew even without an education and without knowing any science, that the electricit­y that comes off the microgrid is not the same,” she says.

Inequality from access to electricit­y comes in many forms. One is the lack of access itself and the second is access to a watered-down version. The first allows consumers’ free reign of use, the latter requires consumers to consider the collective good. The first comes from privilege, the latter from the interminab­le wait to be hooked up to the grid.

When Tulsabai Sankhwad, 42, became sarpanch of Arjapur, in Biloli, Maharashtr­a, her first act in 2015 was to give electricit­y to the Masanjogi gully, a narrow strip of slums, the nomadic community had been consigned to since the 1960s. For the first time, there are streetligh­ts along its narrow lane, and in her house, a tubelight, a bulb, and a mixer. The electricit­y is not constant. As evening falls, they still sometimes sit in the dark, but that it comes on at all is a big change.

One of the small repercussi­ons of enforced representa­tion policies in local body politics has been the widening of access to power, real power.

“Whether the electricit­y comes from the convention­al grid or the solar microgrid, to the recipient, electricit­y is electricit­y,” says Debajit Palit, associate director of The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI) for rural energy and livelihood­s. In Jharkhand and Chhattisga­rh, Palit tells of villages that differenti­ate between “asli bijli” (real electricit­y) and “chhoti bijli” (little electricit­y).

“They join the queue of people who keep waiting for the government grid,” Palit says. The distinctio­n between ‘asli’ and ‘chhoti’ bijli or electricit­y emanating from microgrids, or solo solar panels that provide enough power to charge just one mobile phone or one low watt bulb, is commonplac­e in the villages of the havenots. The terms are self-explanator­y: renewable electricit­y is temporary, a stop gap arrangemen­t.

Remarkably, there is no real study conducted on the factors that influenced the distributi­on of electricit­y amongst villagers and towns over the past 70 years. But even as the push to reduce the queue intensifie­s, it is apparent that those in line have lived with many deprivatio­ns.

Some indicators are available in a paper titled, ‘Inequaliti­es in LPG and electricit­y consumptio­n: The role of caste, tribe and religion.’ Authored by Vibhor Saxena, economist from the University of Standrews,and Prabir Bhattachar­ya, Herriot-watt University, UK, they used data from the 68th National Sample Survey Organisati­on data (2011-12) of 87,753 households, to identify inequaliti­es in access to electricit­y and Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) amongst scheduled castes, scheduled tribes and Muslims. Saxena and Bhattachar­ya point out that since the aim of electrific­ation was to increase food output until 2004, households remained neglected. Because irrigation was the priority, wealthy and upper caste farmers had prime pickings and everyone else relied on theft and leakages.

“In the urban areas too, it is claimed that the supply of electricit­y is least interrupte­d in those areas where the members of high-income social groups generally live,” the paper points out.

Major factors influencin­g lack of access are linked to location. Scheduled castes, tribes and Muslims have lived in socio-economical­ly backward locations, remote areas, or where urban, in ghettos. In rural areas, they live in segregated areas. Lack of law enforcemen­t in urban slums allows for illegal access to electricit­y but also results in penalties.

Using econometri­cs, the authors quantify how “the impacts of education, household income, age and other determinan­ts of access to modern energy goods may be unfavourab­ly skewed against marginalis­ed social groups.” They considered access to a ration card, the household’s main occupation, average age of members, size, ownership of dwelling, and ‘ceremonies’ over the last 30 days, the logic being that families that have held

ceremonies consume 109KW of electricit­y while the average consumptio­n is 87KW.

Ration cards are found to enable access to public goods and services and those with them are found to consume higher electricit­y. Households, whose primary occupation is agricultur­e, consume 6.2% less electricit­y than non-agricultur­al households. The authors outline how it is all interlinke­d.

Access to these depends on higher

income, higher education levels, better health of members, which, in turn, depends on access to clean water and cooking fuels, which is linked to access to electricit­y.

What is significan­t is, after accounting for income and education, there is a difference in the likelihood of access between caste and social status. This indicates the prevalence of social bias. The study indicates that even amongst the marginalis­ed groups, the scheduled tribes have the lowest probabilit­y of access.

According to the study, “In the case of electricit­y usage, scheduled tribes have the lowest predicted outcome followed by scheduled caste households. Muslims households have a predicted outcome larger than all social groups, including upper caste households.”

Predicted probabilit­y of electricit­y usage rises as we move from illiterate to highly-educated category households. Estimates of discrimina­tion are more likely to be relevant for scheduled tribes and castes than Muslim households, the authors conclude.

At the policy level, while there are many schemes and interventi­ons to overcome inequaliti­es in general, the authors call for pointed interventi­ons in access to electricit­y for marginalis­ed households.

The issue of equitable access across caste and community lines has been neglected, and due to the push for complete electrific­ation, is becoming less critical, says N Sreekumar, a Hyderabadb­ased analyst at Prayas.

“We believe that there are political pressures to decide which 10% gets electrifie­d first and the routes of the electricit­y lines. But with the drive for 100% electrific­ation, this question is less critical,” he says. As connectivi­ty proliferat­es, microgrids will soon take on the supporting role.

Ashwini Chitnis, also an analyst at Prayas, points out that the issue most renewable grids are facing today is how to stave off redundancy and play that supplement­ary role.

“There is no doubt that connectivi­ty to the main grid allows consumers greater freedom of usage and is also more cost-effective as it spreads the cost over a larger consumer base. The microgrid is not sustainabl­e in terms of cost for heavy usage.”

As the march towards 100% electrific­ation picks up pace, the issues of sustainabl­e and equitable use, remain. The longterm solution will be for renewable energy sources to feed into the main grid, experts say. So far, it’s been one or the other. A determined blending requires an understand­ing of the lack of equity, and that has not been quantified. As for consumers, who hope to consume as equals, the never-ending cycle of consumptio­n is triggered to the point of inclusion. Everyone’s waiting for asli bijli now.

We believe that there are political pressures to decide which 10% gets electrifie­d first and the routes of the electricit­y lines. But with the drive for 100% electrific­ation, this question is less critical. N SREEKUMAR, an analyst at Prayas, NGO

 ?? ANSHUMAN POYREKAR/HT PHOTO ?? Sarpanch Tulsabai Sankhwad, who is from the Masan Jogi community of Arjapur village, in Nanded. After becoming the sarpanch, Sankhwad’s first act was to give electricit­y to the Masanjogi gully, a narrow strip of slums the nomadic community had been...
ANSHUMAN POYREKAR/HT PHOTO Sarpanch Tulsabai Sankhwad, who is from the Masan Jogi community of Arjapur village, in Nanded. After becoming the sarpanch, Sankhwad’s first act was to give electricit­y to the Masanjogi gully, a narrow strip of slums the nomadic community had been...

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