mainlogo2.jpg (11011 bytes)

E D I T O R I A L


 Kathmandu Saturday April 20, 2002 Baishakh 07,  2059.

 

 


For Renewable Energy

THOUGH Nepal’s rate of per capita energy consumption is one of the lowest in the world, the Nepalese in general face great hardships in meeting their energy needs. The living standards being poor, the average Nepalese consumes much less energy than what is needed for him and his family, with all that it implies in terms of privation and productivity. For an average Nepali villager, fulfilling the partial daily energy needs itself is a difficulty chore, often demanding a great deal of time and energy from one or more members of the family. Firewood is a major source of meeting energy needs for the rural Nepalese. With rising population, traditional non-renewable sources like forest, are just not enough to meet the energy needs. It is against this background that alternative sources of energy have to be tapped. It is only logical that as far as practicable renewable sources of energy be utilized. Sadly, in Nepal, for all the rhetorics in favour of renewable energy, active interventions to encourage use of such sources are lacking. The fuel import bill of Nepal continues to balloon. It is not that there are no means to extract renewable energy that are around us. Worried by a future scenario where fossil fuel is run out by the middle of this century if the current rate of consumption remains unchanged, the western world has developed alternative technologies, many of which are getting popular. Naturally, countries like Nepal where development of renewable energy is crucial and possible, transfer of appropriate technologies or development of indigenous technologies should receive utmost priority. As said by a speaker at a four-day awareness programme on Renewable Energy Technologies (RETs) in Kathmandu on Thursday, an efficient application of renewable energy technologies would increase the possibilities of the generation of cleaner form of energy, especially in areas without the national electricity grid.

Considering that only a little over 15 per cent of Nepalese have access to electricity, promoting such technologies at the village level is vital if the acute needs of energy of the poor people are to be met. The local resource for power—for example, small hydels—is best developed and useful if it is owned and handled by the people themselves. By giving these villagers a tool to go for renewable energy and thus move away from traditional non-renewable sources for fulfilling their energy needs, the government could tangibly improve their socio-economic conditions. In other words, bettering the lives of most of the rural folks of Nepal could actually mean renewable energy being considered as the main energy source, not just as an alternative.


Other Story


|Headline| |Features| |Local| |Letter| |Past|


Send your comments and letters to the editor at gtrn@mos.com.np
2002 © Mercantile Communications Pvt. Ltd. P.O. Box 876, Durbar Marg, Kathmandu, NEPAL. Tel : 977 1 220 773, 243566, Fax: 977 1 225 407. Reproduction in any form is prohibited without prior permission. No part of the articles which appear in the internet version on THE RISING NEPAL may be reproduced without the permission of Mercantile Communications Pvt. Ltd. For reprinting rights, please write to US. Send us your feedback: CONTACT US ABOUT US  HOME ADVERTISE WITH US TOP