[governance] Africa, ICT and electricity

Nyangkwe Agien Aaron nyangkweagien at gmail.com
Fri Sep 14 11:37:40 EDT 2007


Milton writes:  "I have always argued that ICT development is driven
by broader, systemic economic development and cannot be considered in
isolation".

That is true in regards to power problems which is a nightmare in many
developing countries. When one consider that alternatives to power
malfunctions are being soughtout, like the fascinating solar energy
approach by The Barefoot college of India where "Science illitrate"
persons are trained in solar energy (ASAFE is currently solar
electrifying two villages in Cameroon using that approach), then there
is no cause for alarm. The proliferation of mobile phones and the
advent of of the Internet is a blessing to these countries.
If governments are ineffective in engaging in any systemic economic
development policies, civil society organisations should come in. We
currently live in a capitalist global State, where policies are made
favoring those who have, leaving the havenots to damn their
consequencies.
When the Haves must have amassed so much wealth, and hit by some moral
jitters, they turn around and chip something around through name
cause-marketing foundations.

Let the debate glow

Aaron




On 9/14/07, kwasi boakye-akyeampong <kboakye1 at yahoo.co.uk> wrote:
> David wrote:
> "But then, a handheld device of any sort still needs electricity to
> work. Even if the device can be powered by some form of wind-up
> mechanism, for example, the infrastructure still needs to b developed, and
> powered."
> Good point David. I was in Sierra Leone sometime this year as a volunteer
> for a Charitable organisation involved with street children and you have no
> idea how much of a shock I, an frican, had. Freetown, the capital town, has
> no power supply as a result those who can afford resort to power generators.
> Mobile phone charging is therefore a booming business. People have set up
> small shops where you go and charge your battery powered equipments. It
> costs 500 Leones (about 17 cents) to charge 1 battery meaning if you have a
> mobile phone and you charge it just once a day, you are going to spend 17
> cents. It also costs 1,000 Leones (about 34 cents) to use the Internet for 1
> hour at an Internet cafe. So charging your mobile phone just once a day and
> staying on the Internet for just an hour a day will cost 51 cents. And I'm
> talking about a country where more than 75% lives under $2 a day.
>
> Getting your mobile phone charged even depends on the guy who owns the shop.
> Sometimes he opens the shop late and imagine if you have to leave the house
> at by 9AM and the shop is still not open. There was a day that the shop
> close to my house didn't open because the owner's son was ill and I needed
> to charge my batteries (video camera, digital camera, digital audio
> recorder, and mobile phone). I had an appointment for an interview at 10 AM
> and some others afterwards. I had to cancel some of the appointments because
> there was no way I could attend to the first appointment, get the batteries
> charged and attend to the others.
>
> I'm not being negative here, but unless certain fundamental infrastructure,
> like electricity, is in place, every effort at tackling the digital divide
> will be frustrated. You can send free computers and mobile phones to the
> people and yet they will find it difficult to stay connected.
>
> The Sierra Leone situation is not too different from what happens in towns
> and villages outside the capitals in Africa. You still have power rationing
> and frequent outages even in the capital cities.
>
> I think what we have to be doing is to take a reflection on how much effort
> and resources have been pumped into bridging the digital divide and see
> whether the gains match up. If not, which I think is the case, then we
> should look for appropriate models that would suit each particular
> environment.
>
> Kwasi
>
> David Goldstein <goldstein_david at yahoo.com.au> wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I've just finished reading an article in The Economist - Electricity in
> Africa: The dark continent. See
> http://economist.com/world/africa/displaystory.cfm?story_id=9660077.
>
> This had me thinking back to a discussion here recently on ICT in Africa.
> The article notes "Africa accounts for over a sixth of the world's
> population, but
> generates only 4% of global electricity. Three-quarters of that is used
> by South Africa, Egypt and the other countries along the north African
> littoral."
>
> Other points made are "Only 6% of Congolese have access to electricity and
> more power will be needed to get at the country's trove of minerals. ...
> Aggreko, a company based in Scotland, is the world's biggest supplier
> of temporary electricity in the shape of back-up generators. It meets
> up to 50% of Uganda's power needs, and 10% of those of Kenya and
> Tanzania. It believes that the global power shortfall in the next
> decade will be much greater than predicted, perhaps over 500,000MW. The
> ensuing competition for energy, it argues, will see the world split
> between those countries whose economies grow faster than their power
> consumption and those, including most of Africa, whose power
> consumption grows faster than their economies."
>
> There are obviously huge issues in just providing power to much of Africa
> before the vast majority of the population can even be connected to the
> internet. And then with a global shortfall of power, where does that leave
> the ongoing development of ICT?
>
> For those interested in ICT in Africa, I was sent a link to an article on
> Ghana (thanks Kwasi) - Ghana's internet growth slowed by high cost. See
> http://myjoyonline.com/features/200709/8441.asp.
>
> The article starts, "Most Ghanaians do not have access to the internet, in
> spite of the
> proliferation of ICT in the
> country, due to cost. Many more Ghanaians have access to mobile telephony
> than they have access to the internet."
>
> Reading this, it means the future of internet access in much of Africa could
> be via handheld devices (mobile phones, smart phones...), and so planning on
> governance issues probably should be done with this in mind. But then, a
> handheld device of any sort still needs electricity to work. Even if the
> device can be powered by some form of wind-up mechanism, for example, the
> infrastructure still needs to b developed, and powered.
>
> Anyway, something to think about.
>
> Cheers
> David
>
> ---------
> David Goldstein
> address: 4/3 Abbott Street
> COOGEE NSW 2034
> AUSTRALIA
> email: Goldstein_David @yahoo.com.au
> phone: +61 418 228 605 (mobile); +61 2 9665 5773 (home)
>
> "Every time you use fossil fuels, you're adding to the problem. Every time
> you forgo fossil fuels, you're being part of the solution" - Dr Tim Flannery
>
>
>
>
>
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-- 
Aaron Agien Nyangkwe
Journalist/Outcome Mapper
Special Assistant To The President
Coach of ASAFE Camaroes Street Football Team.
ASAFE
P.O.Box 5213
Douala-Cameroon
Tel. 237 3337 50 22
Cell Phone: 237 79 95 71 97
Fax. 237 3342 29 70
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