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Update: Liberia Finds Solar Power Gets Things Moving Again. Click to read more.

Liberia Finds Solar Power Gets Things Moving Again

Cover of June 2009 issue of FrontLines - Click on image to download PDFLiberians who live, study, or work outside the limited electric grid of the capital, Monrovia, do not have affordable, reliable light. A place to charge a mobile phone is a daily quest.

Less than two percent of rural areas and about ten percent of the urban capital area have modern energy sources.

People who live in thatched or makeshift dwellings use hazardous candles and kerosene lamps – there are no fire fighters to come to the rescue. A fortunate minority have generators that run on expensive fuel.

Renewable energy is emerging to fill the need for power, allowing the rebuilding country to leapfrog over polluting fuels into “green” energy using the country’s abundance of sun and water.

In 2006, the USAID Liberia Energy Assistance Program (LEAP) began helping the post-war government of President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf create a national energy policy, including a strategy to reach the most underserved.

In two years, LEAP showed the benefits of low maintenance solar technologies at 19 sites in schools, clinics, small businesses, and public buildings supported by other USAID programs.

Some examples of these pilot sites and how they renewed people’s lives and livelihoods follow.

Source: “Focus on Liberia,” FrontLines, June 2009.

 

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