The Jerusalem Post

Waiting for grid to arrive, Myanmar villages switch on solar

- • By THIN LEI WIN

NYAUNG KONE, Myanmar (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – For generation­s, residents of this farming village in central Myanmar had a set rhythm to their day – waking up with the sunrise and going to sleep after dark. Diesel generators and batteries were for the privileged few, while the candles used by most were a fire hazard for thatch and bamboo houses.

On a recent, balmy evening, however, the remote village of Nyaung Kone in Myanmar’s central Dry Zone was still abuzz long after night fell.

Women sifted onions and winnowed peanuts under their stilt homes. There were queues at snack stalls and children recited their lessons. One family watched a Korean soap opera on TV.

“I used to spend about 200 kyat ($0.15) every night on candles for my sons to study, and I was always worried it would cause a fire. Now I don’t spend that anymore and can work late into the night,” said peanut farmer Than Than Sint, 44.

A power inverter blinked nearby on the floor of her neighbor’s home, connected to two solar panels.

Access to electricit­y from clean sources such as solar and smallscale hydropower is changing the centuries-old way of life in thousands of rural communitie­s like this across Myanmar.

But experts say unsupporti­ve policies and a lack of political will are hampering the developmen­t of a commercial­ly viable market in renewable energy.

More than two-thirds of Myanmar’s 51 million people lack access to reliable, affordable electricit­y, mostly in rural areas.

Yet successive government­s have focused on large-scale hydropower, gas and coal, which critics say are environmen­tally destructiv­e and costly.

Than Than Sint, whose husband left to work in Malaysia nine years ago, paid 63,000 ($46) for her solar system in installmen­ts over 10 months, under a project led by Pact, an internatio­nal nonprofit working with businesses to bring electricit­y to a million people in rural Myanmar by 2020.

The solar power lights up her shrine, living room and the space beneath her house, where she works in the evenings.

Half of Nyaung Kone bought solar systems through Pact’s program, while 16 more families later purchased them outright from the same supplier.

The project’s second phase, if Pact can find funding, would develop mini-grids – local power networks that can supply a village, unconnecte­d to the national grid.

For over half a century, Myanmar’s military rulers neglected their citizens, leaving nearly 40,000 villages without access to the aging grid.

But with blackouts plaguing even areas that are grid-connected in the dry season due to an over-reliance on hydropower people have taken matters into their own hands.

“With no government support whatsoever, there has risen a market for household-scale solutions,” said Chris Greacen, a consultant on off-grid electrific­ation who has advised the World Bank and Germany’s developmen­t agency GIZ in Myanmar.

According to Myanmar’s 2014 census, about 178,000 households used private water mills as a primary source of lighting, while 945,000 used solar and 1 million used diesel generators.

Generators are expensive. Pact says one hour of diesel power in rural Myanmar costs roughly the same as 24 hours of power in Yangon, the commercial capital. But their prevalence shows villagers’ willingnes­s to pay to get electricit­y, experts say.

Renewables are greener and cheaper, quicker to set up and well-positioned for off-grid needs, said Aung Myint, general secretary of the Renewable Energy Associatio­n of Myanmar (REAM).

Yet there is little political will to develop a sustainabl­e market in renewables, or even consider their potential as the government favors a centralize­d system, he said.

Myanmar’s Energy Master Plan, drawn up with the Asian Developmen­t Bank (ADB), projects a significan­t increase in coal’s share of national electricit­y output by 2030, to almost 30% from less than 2% in 2015.

Meanwhile, the $5.8-billion National Electrific­ation Plan (NEP), which aims to bring power to all of Myanmar by 2030 and overwhelmi­ngly favors grid extension, is starting with a $400 million loan from the World Bank, which said the money is not funding coal or hydropower projects.

Industry watchers call the universal access target ambitious. But Sunil Kumar Khosla, the World Bank’s lead energy specialist, said Vietnam, Laos and Thailand were able to increase electricit­y coverage from 30% to nearly 100% within two decades.

Myanmar’s Department of Rural Developmen­t, which is responsibl­e for off-grid electrific­ation, did not respond to requests for comment on government policy.

Greacen said renewable energy systems, especially micro-hydro and mini-grids, are viable options while people wait to be connected to the main power grid.

In Thailand, a program for “very small power producers” allows mini-grids to sell electricit­y to the national grid at standardiz­ed rates.

“That program has enabled over 3,000 megawatts of small-scale renewables to come online – that’s the same generating capacity as three large nuclear power plants,” said Greacen.

Yet in Myanmar, basic laws governing off-grid and rural electrific­ation have not been passed. REAM’s Aung Myint said this regulatory bottleneck makes investors reluctant to step in.

In addition, most of Myanmar’s off-grid projects so far have been heavily subsidized by the government or donors.

For example, nearly 500,000 households will benefit from solar home systems and mini-grids under the NEP, with subsidies of up to 90%.

“How can you compete with a free or nearly free product?” asked Evan Scandling, Myanmar managing director of Sunlabob Renewable Energy Ltd, which recently built 11 solar mini-grids in remote villages under an ADB programme.

But with thousands of villages unlikely to be connected to the grid for the foreseeabl­e future, “there’s a market opportunit­y and a developmen­t opportunit­y”, he added.

The main clients for off-grid solutions in Myanmar are the 4.5 million households spending more than $200 million per year on candles, kerosene, batteries and diesel, according to the Internatio­nal Finance Corporatio­n, the World Bank’s private-sector arm which is helping foster a commercial market for solar devices and kits in the country.

Farmer Myint Maung, 58, has heard rumors the main grid might reach his isolated village of Aung Thar in the Dry Zone next year - but hook-ups will cost each household 400,000 kyat (almost $300).

“I’m not sure how I can afford that. I might as well stick with my solar system,” he said.

 ?? (Wikimedia Commons) ?? STILT HOUSES are perched along Inle Lake in central Myanmar.
(Wikimedia Commons) STILT HOUSES are perched along Inle Lake in central Myanmar.

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