
Power Cuts Still Leave Kabul in the
Dark
Jan 13, 2008 - The Associated Press
Gul Hussein was standing under a pale street lamp
in a poor section of east Kabul when the entire neighborhood
suddenly went black.
"As you can see, it is dark everywhere," the 62-year-old
man said, adding that his family would light a costly
kerosene lamp for dinner that evening. "Some of our
neighbors are using candles, but candles are expensive,
too."
More than five years after the fall of the Taliban
- and despite hundreds of millions of dollars in international
aid - dinner by candlelight remains common in the
Afghan capital of Kabul. Nationwide, only 6 percent
of Afghans have electricity, the Asian Development
Bank says.
The electricity shortage underscores the slow progress
in rebuilding the war-torn country. It also feeds
other problems. Old factories sit idle, and new ones
are not built. Produce withers without refrigeration.
Dark, cold homes foster resentment against the government.
In Kabul, power dwindles after the region's hydroelectric
dams dry up by midsummer. This past fall, residents
averaged only three hours of municipal electricity
a day, typically from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m., according
to USAID, the American government aid agency. Some
neighborhoods got none.
"That's a scary sounding figure because it's pretty
tiny," said Robin Phillips, the USAID director in
Afghanistan. "So we're talking about the relatively
poorer people in Kabul who have no access to electricity
at this time of year."
Electricity was meager under the Taliban too, when
Kabul residents had perhaps two hours of it a day
in fall and winter. The supply has since increased,
but not as fast as Kabul's population - from fewer
than 1 million people in the late 1990s to more than
4 million today.
Meanwhile, souring U.S. relations with Uzbekistan
have delayed plans to import electricity from that
country. Power is not expected to arrive in a significant
way until late 2008 or mid-2009.
"Life takes power," said Jan Agha, a 60-year-old
handyman from west Kabul who recalled how the city
had plentiful power during the 1980s Soviet occupation.
"If you have electricity life is good, but if there's
no electricity you go around like a blind man."
Some in Kabul do have electricity: the rich, powerful
and well-connected.
Municipal workers - under direction from the Ministry
of Water and Energy - funnel what power there is to
politicians, warlords and foreign embassies. Special
lines run from substations to their homes, circumventing
the power grid. International businesses pay local
switch operators bribes of $200 to $1,000 a month
for near-constant power, an electrical worker said
anonymously for fear of losing his job.
If high-ranking government officials visit the substations,
workers race to cut off the illegal connections. Large
diesel generators, which businesses and wealthy homeowners
own as a backup, rumble to life.
Ismail Khan, the country's water and energy minister,
dismisses allegations of corruption as a "small problem."
"The important thing to talk about is that in six
months all of these power problems will be solved,
and everyone will have electricity 24 hours a day,"
he said, an optimistic prediction that relies on heavy
rains next spring and quick work on the Uzbekistan
line.
Colorful maps on the walls of Khan's office show
existing and future power lines. There's a wall-mounted
air conditioner - a luxury in Afghanistan.
India, the Asian Development Bank and the World Bank
have spent hundreds of millions of dollars on new
power lines - including transmission towers installed
this summer at 15,000 feet over the Hindu Kush mountains
- to import electricity from Uzbekistan.
Though the line from Kabul to the Uzbek border is
in place, a 25-mile section in Uzbekistan has not
yet been built. And the U.S. has little leverage to
speed it up, said Rakesh Sood, the Indian ambassador
here.
Initially, Uzbekistan supported the U.S.-led war
in Afghanistan, opening an air base to U.S. planes.
But the Uzbek government no longer views America as
a friend, ever since U.S. leaders loudly criticized
the country's human rights record when government-backed
forces massacred peaceful demonstrators in 2005.
Even when the Uzbek line is completed, Afghanistan
can no longer expect the 300 megawatts originally
envisioned, Sood said. That would have been more than
the 190 megawatts Kabul has today and a significant
boost to the 770 megawatts Afghanistan has nationwide.
"We know we'll get significantly less. I wouldn't
hazard a guess as to what it will be," Sood said.
"At that time the U.S.-Uzbek relationship was very
high and it has deteriorated substantially."
President Hamid Karzai, during a radio address to
the nation last fall, said he discussed with President
Bush the country's need to produce its own electricity.
But some efforts have run afoul of the continuing
Taliban insurgency. A new U.S.-financed turbine for
a hydroelectric dam in Helmand province is a few months
away from being installed because of the "lack of
permissiveness in the environment," USAID's Phillips
said, using a euphemism for the spiraling violence
there.
lso, more than $100 million is needed to upgrade
Kabul's antiquated distribution system, and it remains
unclear who will pay.
"One doesn't like to see the kinds of numbers that
we've been talking about, but I wouldn't call it a
failure," Phillips said. "To put a little more positive
spin on it we all wish things could happen more rapidly."
The lack of power has hamstrung U.S. efforts to boost
agriculture production, too.
"The No. 1 challenge to agribusiness is electricity,"
said Loren Owen Stoddard, USAID director in Kabul
for alternative development and agriculture. "You
can't keep things cold and you can't bottle them without
power."
The U.S. is purchasing fuel-powered generators that
will provide 100 megawatts of power for Kabul by late
next year. The power will not come cheap at 15 to
20 cents per kilowatt-hour, compared with just 3.5
cents for electricity from Uzbekistan.
But until the Uzbek power comes in, Afghanistan has
no choice.
"It's going to be more oil-fired power and praying
for rain to get the hydropower going," said Sean O'Sullivan,
regional director with the Asian Development Bank.
On a smaller scale, India has spent $2.2 million
to outfit 100 villages with $450 solar cells. They
dot the flat rooftops in Mullah Khatir Khel, a mud-brick
village an hour's drive north of Kabul. Each cell
can power a couple of light bulbs.
"I am very happy, why should I not be happy? I am
using these bulbs and lanterns provided by India,"
said villager Abdul Gayoom. "Before we used to burn
oil lamps, now it's a big saving."
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