Times of Oman

Letting the light into energy starved Pakistan

-

MURID KHOSO

(Pakistan): Reclining comfortabl­y on a bed outside his mud home, 75-year-old farmer Mohammad Khoso watches life go by.

His family is now the centre of everyone’s envy in the southern Pakistani village of Murid Khoso - they have electricit­y.

“Now I can eat fish and not worry about bones getting stuck in my throat,” Mohammad told the Thomson Reuters Foundation, describing how he enjoys a well-lit evening meal since his son, Ghulam Nabi, installed solar bulbs in his home three months ago.

For nearly a decade, chronic power shortages have hobbled Pakistan’s economy, leaving 144 million people without electricit­y or enduring lengthy blackouts, the World Bank says.

Globally, more than one billion people, or one in seven, lacked access to electricit­y in 2014 and many more suffer from poor supply, which keeps them trapped in poverty, reliant on wood, candles and kerosene, experts say. These numbers may be grim but young entreprene­urs like Saad Ahmad see this as huge growth potential in Pakistan, which generates only two-thirds of its energy needs.

“There is massive opportunit­y for business,” said Ahmad, 26, chief executive of solar energy supplier Nizam Bijli, which has powered 1,300 homes since it started in 2016 and hopes to reach 1 million people by 2020.

“There is room for many companies to make a difference in the lives of these communitie­s.”

While the government is investing heavily in coal-fired power plants, tapping into undergroun­d coal reserves, private investors are exploring renewable energy.

A similar ‘off-grid revolution’ is afoot across Africa due to fastdroppi­ng costs and plenty of sun.

Currently only four per cent of Pakistani households tap into solar power due to lack of awareness, limited supply chains and a shortage of consumer financing for relatively high up-front costs, according to the World Bank.

Nizam Bijli installs pay-asyou-go solar systems in homes and businesses, where customers pay 2,000 Pakistani rupees ($18) a month over 16 months for three bulbs, one fan and two USB slots to charge their mobile phones.

Ahmad believes this is affordable as families spend a similar amount on kerosene and charging mobile phones in nearby towns. The average income in Pakistan is about $1,450, according to World Bank data. Ahmad is certain the only way out of Pakistan’s energy crisis is to bypass the grid and leapfrog straight into low-carbon sources like wind and solar.

“The whopping costs associated with grid extension (and) low electricit­y consumptio­n by rural communitie­s dispersed over large swathes presents a barrier to investment,” he said.

Pakistan already has one major solar park in the eastern province of Punjab, built with Chinese investment.

Meanwhile, the parliament in Islamabad switched to solar energy in 2016 and sells excess energy it produces back to the grid.

Allah Dino’s barber shop in Khorwah, 180 km (110 miles) east of Pakistan’s largest city, Karachi, is connected to the grid. But intermitte­nt power had forced him to close by sunset. Now he has solar, his business is open until close to midnight. Full story @ timesofoma­n.com/world

 ?? - File photo ?? CHRONIC POWER SHORTAGES: For nearly a decade, chronic power shortages have hobbled Pakistan’s economy, leaving 144 million people without electricit­y or enduring lengthy blackouts, the World Bank says.
- File photo CHRONIC POWER SHORTAGES: For nearly a decade, chronic power shortages have hobbled Pakistan’s economy, leaving 144 million people without electricit­y or enduring lengthy blackouts, the World Bank says.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman