TY - JOUR
T1 - Benefits from a renewable energy village electrification system
AU - Zahnd, Alex
AU - Kimber, Haddix Mc Kay
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors wish to acknowledge our Humla RIDS-Nepal NGO staff, whose dedication, creativity and endurance under often extremely difficult living and working conditions has never dwindled. Further, special thanks to The ISIS Foundation, LiN (Light in Nepal) and LUTW, whose partnership and ongoing funds have been vital for all the Humla projects. Alex Zahnd records his and the community's gratitude to Kathmandu University for enabling him to continue this community research and development work, not only in the laboratory but also in Humla, to produce the results and achievements for those for whom they were meant. Kimber Haddix McKay thanks donors to the ISIS Foundation for their generous support of research-based development projects, and the University of Montana for research leave.
PY - 2009/2
Y1 - 2009/2
N2 - More than 100 years after Edison's life changing discovery, 1.6-2 billion people around the globe still live without light, in dark and smoke filled homes. The remote and impoverished Himalayan villages of upper Humla, in north-west Nepal, belong to some of the 2.4 billion people who still depend on the use of traditional biomass for their daily energy services such as cooking, heating and light. These activities on open fireplaces have a direct chronic impact on the health and extremely low life expectancy of the women and children along with devastating deforestation. There is a strong relationship between prosperity and access to electricity. The more remote and isolated communities in Nepal generally live in great poverty. Eighty percent of Nepal's 28.5 million people live in rural areas, with around half of these so remote, that neither a road, nor the national grid is ever likely to reach them. While Nepal has no fossil fuel resources, it is a country that is rich in renewable energy resources such as hydropower and solar energy. These abundant and locally available renewable energy resources can be tapped into with appropriate locally developed technologies. Generating and storing electrical energy derived from these rich local energy resources can provide for appropriate and sustainable lighting, which brings potential health, education, social and economic benefits to the people who have previously lived in homes with excessive indoor air pollution. This paper describes the living conditions of some villages in upper Humla, and the possible benefits of a simple village electrification system that provides basic lighting for the homes and the consequent improvements in the living conditions of the villagers.
AB - More than 100 years after Edison's life changing discovery, 1.6-2 billion people around the globe still live without light, in dark and smoke filled homes. The remote and impoverished Himalayan villages of upper Humla, in north-west Nepal, belong to some of the 2.4 billion people who still depend on the use of traditional biomass for their daily energy services such as cooking, heating and light. These activities on open fireplaces have a direct chronic impact on the health and extremely low life expectancy of the women and children along with devastating deforestation. There is a strong relationship between prosperity and access to electricity. The more remote and isolated communities in Nepal generally live in great poverty. Eighty percent of Nepal's 28.5 million people live in rural areas, with around half of these so remote, that neither a road, nor the national grid is ever likely to reach them. While Nepal has no fossil fuel resources, it is a country that is rich in renewable energy resources such as hydropower and solar energy. These abundant and locally available renewable energy resources can be tapped into with appropriate locally developed technologies. Generating and storing electrical energy derived from these rich local energy resources can provide for appropriate and sustainable lighting, which brings potential health, education, social and economic benefits to the people who have previously lived in homes with excessive indoor air pollution. This paper describes the living conditions of some villages in upper Humla, and the possible benefits of a simple village electrification system that provides basic lighting for the homes and the consequent improvements in the living conditions of the villagers.
KW - Elementary village electrification
KW - Holistic community development (HCD)
KW - Human development index (HDI)
KW - Indoor air pollution
KW - Poverty
KW - Renewable energy
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=53749096065&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.renene.2008.05.011
DO - 10.1016/j.renene.2008.05.011
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:53749096065
SN - 0960-1481
VL - 34
SP - 362
EP - 368
JO - Renewable Energy
JF - Renewable Energy
IS - 2
ER -