Mail & Guardian

In the dark: Poverty and pollution in oil-rich Congo

- Laudes Martial Mbon

Behind their homes is an oil pipeline and above them are high-voltage cables suspended between pylons. A little further off is a flare tower, burning off excess gas 24 hours a day. Yet these potent symbols of the Republic of Congo’s oil and gas bonanza mean little to the villagers who live in their shadow.

When darkness falls, they have to fire up a generator or light lamps. None of their homes has electricit­y.

“I’m 68 years old and I live in darkness,” said Florent Makosso, seated beneath a giant banana tree. “My parents and grandparen­ts had a better quality of life when [Congobrazz­aville] was French Equatorial Africa.”

Makosso lives in Tchicanou, a small village 40km from Pointenoir­e, the energy hub of the Republic of Congo, also called Congo-brazzavill­e.

The former French colony gained independen­ce in 1958 and became a major oil producer about two decades later. It notched up sales last

year of 344 000 barrels a day, making it the third-biggest exporter south of the Sahara after Angola and Nigeria.

The country is sitting on 100-billion cubic metres of natural gas — more than the entire annual consumptio­n of Germany, the world’s fourth-largest

economy. But little of this wealth has translated into prosperity for the country’s 5.5-million people — about half live in extreme poverty, according to World Bank figures.

Tchicanou is emblematic of a community that suffers the downsides of fossil fuels but gets few of its benefits.

Surrounded by fruit trees, the village of 700 souls straddles Highway1, the lifeline between the Atlantic port of Pointe-noire and the capital Brazzavill­e. Tchicanou and neighbouri­ng village Bondi host pipelines and pylons for carrying oil products and electricit­y. But they find themselves in the same situation as communitie­s in the remotest parts of the country — they are still not hooked up to the national grid.

The village has no streetligh­ts, and the biggest source of illuminati­on comes from the flare tower at a nearby 487-megawatt, gas-fired power plant, the country’s largest.

“It’s an ordeal living here,” said Makosso. “We have to buy generators, which are expensive, and running them is a challenge in itself.”

Without power, “television and the other electrical appliances are just decoration”, he said, pointing to the simple challenge of keeping food refrigerat­ed.

Fellow resident Flodem Tchicaya said Tchicanou “is in a good location but the only use of the gas that they burn here is to cause pollution and make us sick”.

Roger Dimina, 57, said access to electricit­y in Congo was “unfair”. “Instead of it starting at the bottom and heading to the top, it starts at the top and the bottom has nothing.”

Across Congo, electrific­ation in urban areas reaches less than 40% of homes, while in rural zones, it is less than one home in 10. In a recent interview in the Dépêches de Brazzavill­e newspaper, energy minister Emile Ouosso said the goal was to reach 50% by 2030.

A group close to the Catholic church, the Justice and Peace Commission, has been running an “electricit­y for all” campaign, focussing on villages in the orbit of Pointe-noire. The group’s deputy coordinato­r, Brice Makosso, said the government had declared a budget surplus of 700-billion CFA francs (about R18.5-billion) for this year.

Just a small amount of this could hook villages up to the grid, he said, pointing to duties that oil companies in the area paid to the government.

 ?? Photo: Samir Tounsi/afp ?? Inequity: This worker at the energy hub of Congo in Pointe-noire has a one in 10 chance of having electricit­y in his home.
Photo: Samir Tounsi/afp Inequity: This worker at the energy hub of Congo in Pointe-noire has a one in 10 chance of having electricit­y in his home.

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