Renewable Energy in Sub-Saharan Africa
As I mentioned in a recent article, what we normally call “biomass,” while it’s technically renewable energy, is nowhere near an ideal energy source; most of it is really just deforestation, the cutting and incineration of wood for cooking, lighting, and heating and the release of the resultant exhaust toxins directly into the atmosphere.
I love solutions that ameliorate more than one problem. By bringing renewable energy to this region, we are simultaneously ensuring:
• They’ll leap-frog over fossil fuels, the 20th Century approach, now obsolete
• Forests can remain intact as CO2 sinks
• An immediate reduction in noxious emissions
• They’ll have lighting that provides better security and the capacity to read after dark.
• Electricity will enable refrigeration and thus better human health
• Most importantly, I believe, electrification brings computing and information access, fostering better education, a commodity that lies at the root of prosperity, as well as stronger (and smaller) families.
Six birds with one stone.