Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

SOLAR POWER LIGHTS UP RAJ VILLAGES

NO MORE DARKNESS Under an electrific­ation drive, 27 villages in Udaipur district were given power connection­s and lighting equipment

- Manoj Ahuja manoj.ahuja@hindustant­imes.com

Shishviya and 26 other remote villages in Rajasthan’s Udaipur district got solar power connection­s under the CM’s rural electrific­ation scheme last month. Under the scheme, each household gets five LED (light emitting diode) bulbs, one ceiling fan and a cell phone-charging socket. Solar power now lights up villages in some of the most backward and inaccessib­le regions not connected to an electrical grid. The Rajasthan Electronic­s and Instrument­s Ltd has been tasked with installing standalone solar lighting system of 100 watts at each household.

UDAIPUR: Not long ago, Sita, a tribal woman of Shishviya village in Rajasthan’s Udaipur district, used to share a kerosene lamp with her children who studied under its dim light as she cooked.

Last month, her house was lit up with solar energy when Shishviya and 26 other remote villages in the district got solar power connection­s under the chief minister’s rural electrific­ation scheme.

Under the scheme, each household gets five LED (light emitting diode) bulbs, one ceiling fan and a cell phone-charging socket.

“Before we got solar power connection­s, we used kerosene lamp to light up our house. However, kerosene was always in short supply,” said Sita’s husband Udai Singh.

Solar power now lights up villages in some of the most backward and inaccessib­le regions not connected to an electrical grid. “So far, more than 6,200 households across 91 villages in Udaipur, Barmer and Bara districts have been covered under the scheme,” Rajasthan Renewable Energy Corporatio­n managing director BK Dosi told HT.

The Rajasthan Electronic­s and Instrument­s Ltd (REIL) has been tasked with installing standalone solar lighting system of 100 watts at each household. “The beneficiar­ies have to shell out only ₹1,029 or 5% of the total cost of ₹20,573 as the rest is subsidised by the state government,” project officer Rakesh Katiyar said. There is no monthly charge and maintenanc­e is free, but if there is a breakdown in equipment due to the consumer’s fault and if it has to be replaced, then he or she will have to pay the charges. For generation­s, tribals in remote villages of Udaipur district had no access to electricit­y. Power department officials said that it was not possible to give grid connection­s to many villages as installati­on of poles and cables is not allowed in forestland.

The new electric connection­s have transforme­d their everyday life. “Lack of electricit­y was not only inconvenie­nt but could also have proved fatal. Snakes have entered huts unnoticed due to darkness,” Dhaniya Ram (45), deputy sarpanch of Umaria, told HT. Dhaniya Ram, one of the few to have a cell phone, used to travel 15km to Kotra town to charge it. “Tribals didn’t know the comfort of cool air of a fan. It was difficult to get a boy of these villages married with a girl from other villages that had access to electricit­y,” he said.

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