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Africa Subsaharan
The African power grid collapse is spreading
2023-03-26
[HotAir] Last summer, we looked at the collapse of the power grid in South Africa. The country which previously had the most economically stable and prosperous government in sub-Saharan Africa suffered waves of unemployment and looting as its economy buckled under the strain. They’ve managed to put together some foreign aid to apply patchwork fixes since then, but there are still rolling blackouts taking place on a regular basis. This winter, however, the power grid problems are spreading in one of the more underreported stories of the year. Zimbabwe and Nigeria are now also experiencing near-total collapses of their power grids. People who still have jobs are having to work at night because that’s the only time there is stable electricity. Scheduled blackouts frequently last up to ten or even twelve hours per day, and both nations’ economies are tanking as a result. (Associated Press)

These nations are experiencing unrest, particularly among people who claim that they have continued to pay their utility bills but have no electricity for most of the day. The AP spoke to a couple of residents in Zimbabwe who are food merchants that rely on refrigeration for their products. With no power during the day, the food spoils and they are at risk of losing their livelihoods.

The problems aren’t limited to just these three countries, by the way. 590 million of the 600 million African people who regularly lack access to electricity live in the sub-Saharan region of the country. But even fresh injections of foreign aid have failed to stabilize the situation.

So what do Zimbabwe, Nigeria, and South Africa all have in common? A couple of years ago, Zimbabwe agreed to a UN plan to mandate more renewable energy and move away from coal and natural gas. At roughly the same time, Nigeria signed on to the UN Clean Energy Demand Initiative and John Kerry showed up in person when Nigeria’s president signed the mandate. And as we’ve discussed here before, South Africa started its “transition” to renewable energy years ago, dumping $8.5 billion into the plan in a move the New York Times described as a “Breakthrough for the World.” A few years later, people are sitting in the dark with no heat over wide regions of each country. But I’m sure that’s just a coincidence, right?

Do you know who isn’t worried about having enough power? China. They’ve been issuing construction permits for an average of two new coal plants per week for the past couple of years. China’s carbon output is more than double that of the United States, where the energy industry has been slashing emissions for years. And yet you didn’t hear a peep out of John Kerry and the rest of the climate hecklers who flew their private jets to Davos so they could scold everyone else. China can apparently do what they like because they’re a “developing nation.”
Related:
More renewable energy: 2021-12-03 Extinction Rebellions threatens to blow up pipelines, kill politicians
More renewable energy: 2012-06-17 Subsidies for onshore wind farms 'to be axed by 2020'
More renewable energy: 2011-05-09 Feds Don't Have Enough Cash to Go Green
Posted by:DarthVader

#12  Ob UB40.
Posted by: Elmoper Shonter6856   2023-03-26 23:15  

#11  The prawns having gone, District 9
Can be prosperous! Everything's fine!
With left alien tech,
We elect will eat kek,
And your shantytowns run on red wine!
Posted by: Elmoper Shonter6856   2023-03-26 23:07  

#10  They had a grid. They were a lot further along than I gave them credit for.
Posted by: Super Hose   2023-03-26 21:10  

#9  Eminent Oxford Scientist Says Wind Power "Fails On Every Count"
Posted by: DooDahMan   2023-03-26 15:04  

#8  Do it yourself hook-ups (sans meter) are pretty common. Requires a tall ladder and a steady hand.
Posted by: Besoeker   2023-03-26 13:18  

#7  ^^^ Not to mention that trained people might not be from the politically favored groups.
Posted by: Tom   2023-03-26 12:28  

#6  Keeping the grid up is hard work. You gotta have trained people, equipment, and supplies.
They all cost money, and nobody ever wants to spend it.
Money spent on maintenance and security always looks like a loss on the books. You can't see what it will cost you to not do it.
Posted by: ed in texas   2023-03-26 11:32  

#5  P2K, they are in the middle of their "snooze" from the morning heroin injection.
Posted by: Chris   2023-03-26 11:23  

#4  Maybe they can get some technical help from the people in Sacramento.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2023-03-26 10:59  

#3  EV Fail: Rivian Electric Truck Owner’s ‘Honeymoon Phase’ Ends When It Gets Stuck in Snow
Posted by: Skidmark   2023-03-26 10:57  

#2  Electric Vehicles Bleeding Red Ink: Ford Is Losing Billions on EVs
Posted by: Skidmark   2023-03-26 10:55  

#1  They need EVs
Posted by: Frank G   2023-03-26 10:18  

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