Times of Oman

Gaza power crisis eases as Qatar donates $12m to fuel generators

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GAZA: An electricit­y crisis that has caused protests and unrest in the Gaza Strip eased on Monday after Qatar donated $12 million to buy fuel for the Palestinia­n enclave’s lone power plant, officials said.

For weeks, Gaza’s population of 2 million has been making do with barely a few hours a day of electricit­y - less than half its usual supply. The Energy Authority run by the enclave’s governing Hamas group said the Qatari-funded fuel would power a third generator at the power plant and help provide electricit­y in eight-hour cycles for three months.

Public pressure

The cash injection could also ease public pressure on Hamas, whose police forces clashed on Thursday with demonstrat­ors in Jabalya refugee camp protesting against the blackouts.

The Interior Ministry said that later in the day it would free several people detained in connec- tion with the protests. Gaza has demand for 450-500 Megawatts of power a day but is receiving barely a third of that. About 30 MW is produced by its one ageing power plant, while 30 MW is im- ported from Egypt and 120 MW is supplied from Israel.

The occupied West Bank-based Palestinia­n Authority, which pays for power supplied by Israel and Egypt, normally transfers fuel to Gaza and exempts it from most taxes. But because of its own financial constraint­s, it is no longer offsetting all the tax, angering Hamas. Private generators provide electricit­y to those who can afford it in down times, but the costs of running them have spiralled. Some factories, bakeries and restaurant­s have had to lay off employees and cut working hours to survive.

The local power plant, which was heavily damaged by Israeli bombing during a war in 2006 and still only operates at about half of its potential capacity, could produce slightly more electricit­y but it needs more funds for fuel.

With unpaid consumer bills of around $1 billion, the power company is not in a position to seek more credit. Officials say they need $500 million to rehabilita­te Gaza’s power network. But with Israel and Egypt maintainin­g a tight blockade on Gaza, getting replacemen­t parts is difficult.

 ?? – Reuters ?? RELIEF: A man stands as a fuel tanker arrives at Gaza’s power plant in the central Gaza Strip, on January 16, 2017.
– Reuters RELIEF: A man stands as a fuel tanker arrives at Gaza’s power plant in the central Gaza Strip, on January 16, 2017.

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