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A quarter of humanity still lacks access to electricity. 2.4 billion people use biomass – wood, dung and crop waste – for their basic energy need, cooking. Market-driven and supply-led approaches to providing energy are failing to reach poor people. Political will is required to ensure that modern renewable energy technologies expand the energy choices available to the millions of people living without electricity or clean fuels. A report from the Intermediate Technology Development Group, recently renamed Practical Action urges the international community to make appropriate, affordable and decentralised energy services available to poor people. Relatively small investments are needed to produce or improve technologies that are within the reach of low-income communities. The researchers assert that energy is crucial for improving health and reducing death rates. Energy is required for refrigeration of vaccines and electric equipment for maternity services. The world’s greatest child killer, acute lower respiratory infection, will not be lowered unless exposure to smoke from cooking fires in the home can be reduced. Children cannot study well at night without home lighting. Water is not easily pumped or treated without energy. Many home-based enterprises, such as beer brewing or street foods production increase a family’s dependence on biofuels and exposure to smoke. The incomes of many small producers who rely on energy are under threat because of inefficient production methods and diminishing natural fuel resources. Centralised energy schemes are failing to reach poor people. Transmission grids from conventional power plants often bypass rural communities. Management of large hydro projects is dominated by foreign contractors and low-income majorities in developing countries see few, if any, benefits from them. ITDG/ Practical Action has been involved in several initiatives which show how approaches that rely on community participation can develop locally appropriate sustainable solutions at modest cost:
ITDG/Practical Action calls for energy policies that favour poor people, which:
The Millennium Development Goal of halving poverty will not be achieved without improved energy services to increase production and income, create jobs and reduce drudgery. Failure to take advantage of available opportunities will further marginalise the world’s poorest people from the benefits of energy technology and put further pressure on the planet’s dwindling resources. Source(s): id21 Research Highlight: 28 July 2005
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