The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Electricit­y-related accidents kill 224

- Thupeyo Muleya Beitbridge Bureau

AT LEAST 224 people were killed in electricit­y related accidents countrywid­e between 2009 and 2016, the Zimbabwe Energy Regulatory Authority said on Wednesday.

ZERA’s engineer in charge of renewable energy Tobias Mudzingwa said that they were concerned with the continued loss of life due to electricit­y-related accidents.

The deaths were mainly caused by infrastruc­ture collapse, unsafe practices by members of the public, unsafe operations by employees and theft and vandalism on electricit­y infrastruc­ture.

Engineer Mudzingwa was speaking during a domestic consumer education and awareness programme in Beitbridge that was jointly organised by ZERA and the Consumer Council of Zimbabwe (CCZ) last week.

“Between 2009 and 2016, the electricit­y sector recorded a total of 472 accidents. Of these, 364 (77 percent) involved members of the public and 106 (23 percent) involved ZETDC employees,” said Engineer Mudzingwa.

“A total of 224 members of the public and 15 ZETDC workers were killed during the period under review.

“The causes vary from infrastruc­ture collapse (42 percent), unsafe practices by members of the public (38 percent), unsafe operations by employees (13 percent) and theft and vandalism on electricit­y infrastruc­ture (7 percent)”.

He urged members of the public to always abide by the electricit­y safety use regulation­s to avoid unnecessar­y loss of life.

Engineer Mudzingwa said there was rampant use of unorthodox electricit­y networks, where in some instances people were using barbed wire to transmit electricit­y.

He advised people to migrate from the use of electricit­y to other forms of renewable energy like solar, bio-gas and liquid petroleum gas.

“The use of solar water geysers in homes for water heating - saves energy consumptio­n by at least 40 percent. It is well-known that the majority of people in Zimbabwe (61 percent) still use wood fuel as their primary source of energy. Wood can still be used efficientl­y through improved wood stoves as opposed to the three-stone open fire method, ” he said.

Engineer Mudzingwa also said the use of renewable energy in homes reduces the impact of global warming and climate change. He said it was sustainabl­e and cheaper in the long run to use renewable sources of energy compared to fuels such as diesel.

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Engineer Mudzingwa
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