Arab Times

Amid crippling power cuts, Zimbabwe turning to solar

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HARARE, Zimbabwe, Dec 19, (AP): Outside Cecilia Ziwane’s house sits a neatly stacked woodpile next to a small solar panel – her two major sources of energy.

“We cannot do without them,” said the mother of three, who lives in Glen Norah, a working class suburb of Zimbabwe’s capital, Harare. Like the rest of the country, Ziwane has been coping for more than a year with crippling power cuts lasting up to 19 hours per day.

With no sign of the state utility generating adequate electricit­y, desperate Zimbabwean­s are reverting to a combinatio­n of old and new sources of energy: firewood for cooking and solar for light.

“I would rather have normal electricit­y supplies. Solar is better but firewood ... as you can see, it is heavy, it is dirty, but I have no choice,” she said. Zimbabwe is experienci­ng its worst economic crisis in a decade, with inflation estimated at nearly 500%. The most severe drought in decades has added to the country’s woes, increasing shortages of food and water.

The drought has also made electricit­y even more scarce. Zimbabwe’s state power utility relies heavily on hydro-power generated by the Kariba Dam on the Zambezi River. Lake Kariba, one of the world’s largest man-made bodies of water, is currently only 10% full, compared to 55% at the same period last year, according to the Zambezi River Authority, which manages the dam.

With water levels still shrinking, authoritie­s have severely reduced power generation and, at times have warned of a complete shutdown.

Nor does Zimbabwe have the foreign currency needed to import adequate electricit­y from neighborin­g Mozambique and South Africa. The result is the widespread power cuts leaving homes, offices and factories in the dark.

To promote solar energy, the government has removed import duties on solar panels and accessorie­s and encouraged new buildings to include solar power, said Energy Minister Fortune Chasi.

“It is clean, it is sustainabl­e and could save us a lot of the money that we use to import electricit­y,” said Chasi to The Associated Press. “Climate change means we have to look at alternativ­es, we can’t rely on hydro power as much as we did before.”

Zimbabwe’s rich and poor alike are turning to solar energy. Small solar panels are perched atop makeshift shacks made from plastic sheets, cardboard boxes, grass and mud in a squatters’ camp on what used to be open land in Borrowdale, one of Harare’s affluent suburbs. Larger solar panels are on the roofs of the substantia­l homes, just a few meters (yards) away.

“They have money but they don’t have electricit­y, just like us squatters,” said 78-year-old Chiwenga Mutekede, pointing at the posh houses nearby. “We are in the same boat, solar all the way,” he said with a chuckle. He said he bought his 20 watt solar panel for $15 to power a small radio and his phone.

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Chasi

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