Khaleej Times

In power-short Pakistan, switch to solar power hit by rumours

- Saleem Shaikh and Sughra Tunio Reuters

larkana — Mohammad Aslam has finally found a way to give his family relief from extended power cuts. In February this year he installed a 300watt solar power generating system on the roof of his house.

In Pakistan, power outages scheduled by the country’s strained public electric utilities frequently hit households, lasting as long as 10 hours a day in towns and cities and up to 16 hours in rural areas.

The situation is worst during the brutally hot summer months, when air-conditione­rs often overload the national grid.

Buying solar panels to create power at home might seem an obvious way to bridge the gap. But although the panels have been available since 2014 in Aslam’s town of Larkana, in the southern province of Sindh, the 35-year-old entreprene­ur waited two years before finally installing one.

Cost was’t the problem. Instead, he said, he was put off by rumours that solar panels would actually make things worse.

Unscrupulo­us local utility officials, he says, told him that the dark-coloured solar panels, built to absorb the sun’s rays and convert them to electricit­y, would increase the ambient heat in the buildings they were attached to, pushing the temperatur­e indoors even higher.

According to Aslam, the officials even said that the growing use of solar panels was to blame for the more frequent and intense heat waves that Pakistan has experience­d — something scientists say is entirely untrue.

Climate change and worsening extreme heat is instead driven largely by a huge expansion in the use of fossil fuels such as coal, oil and gas since the start of the industrial revolution, they say.

“I discovered it was a fake rumour only after I installed the solar system on the insistence of my friend, a graduate in electric engineerin­g,” Aslam told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in an interview.

His friend assured him that the rumours were just a trick by utility company employees bent on discouragi­ng wide-scale adoption of solar energy adoption in order to safeguard their jobs.

Tariq Mehmood, general manager of the Islamabad Electric Supply Company (IESCO), a public power utility, said he was not aware of any IESCO employees spreading rumours.

“Our power utility has nothing to do with (any rumours) and disowns them. People shouldn’t believe them,” Mehmood said in a telephone interview.

‘A great relief’

Aslam’s new solar home system — two solar panels, four ceiling fans, four energy-saving lights and a rechargeab­le battery — cost him $500.

During the day the system powers the ceiling fans and stores enough electricit­y in the battery to run the fans and lights for six or seven hours at night if the grid electricit­y supply goes off. The battery can recharge in sunlight in three hours.

“We have fans and lights (that) remain on whenever power outages hit us. What makes me more happy is that my family feels a great relief thanks to it,” Aslam said.

Abdul Karim, a solar panel retailer at the Aabpara electronic market in Islamabad, Pakistan’s capital, said prospectiv­e customers often mention having heard the rumours that solar panels add to heat problems.

“To prove these rumours wrong, often I have to take them to the rooftop of my shop to show them the solar system that powers my shop,” Karim said. “Then many buy solar systems from me.”

As solar home systems become more affordable, many households see them as an alternativ­e to trying to get a new electrical connection via the public power utilities.

According to Mir Ahmad Shah, executive secretary of the Pakistan Renewable and Alternativ­e Energy Associatio­n, public utilities that control power distributi­on and supply fear that the gradual adoption of solar energy will make people less reliant on the national grid.

“Employees of the public power utilities are hampering this growing shift to solar energy through rumours, because they fear the growing adoption solar energy systems will lead to overall revenue decline from new connection applicatio­ns,” Shah said.

Retired Pakistan Railways employee Raja Jameel said he was unsuccessf­ul in getting a grid connection two year ago for his new home in Ghouri, a rural locality on Islamabad’s outskirts.

“What (finally) worked in a matter of a few hours to get what I was denied for nearly four months was a $50 bribe to a superinten­dent of IESCO,” Jameel said in an interview.

He said he believes that in some utility companies, employees responsibl­e for approving new power connection­s try to dissuade potential solar adopters by spreading false rumours about the panels, largely because they do not want to lose potential bribes for approving new grid connection­s.

Jameel plans to build a second storey onto his home to rent out, but he says he will install a 2-kilowatt solar home system to power it, rather than begging for a new power connection from the utility.

IESCO’s Mehmood said that although the utility had periodical­ly received complaints from customers about bribe-taking, it had taken steps to reduce the problem.

“IESCO management has controlled (bribe-taking) through a strong online public complaint redressal system establishe­d a few years ago. Besides, we have made the process of sanctionin­g and issuing new electricit­y connection systems more transparen­t and hasslefree,” Mehmood said. —

 ??  ??
 ?? — AFP ?? As solar home systems become more affordable, many Pakistani households see them as an alternativ­e to trying to get a new electrical connection via the public power utilities.
— AFP As solar home systems become more affordable, many Pakistani households see them as an alternativ­e to trying to get a new electrical connection via the public power utilities.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates