Solar Power Off the Grid: Energy Access for World’s Poor
After the Durban talks last month, climate realists must face the
reality that “shared sacrifice,” however necessary eventually, has
proven a catastrophically bad starting point for global collaboration.
Nations have already spent decades debating who was going to give up how
much first in exchange for what. So we need to seek opportunities —
arenas where there are advantages, not penalties, for those who first
take action — both to achieve first-round emission reductions and to
build trust and cooperation.
One of the major opportunities lies in providing energy access for the
more than 1.2 billion people who don’t have electricity, most of whom,
in business-as-usual scenarios, still won’t have it in 2030. These are
the poorest people on the planet. Ironically, the world’s poorest can
best afford the most sophisticated lighting — off-grid combinations of
solar panels, power electronics, and LED lights. And this creates an
opportunity for which the economics are compelling, the moral urgency
profound, the development benefits enormous, and the potential leverage
game changing.
Saturday, January 7, 2012
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