Sorry, Bill Gates, But You're Wrong on This Issue
Bill Gates just blogged on energy poverty. In that post, he agrees with Bjorn Lomborg who “argues that before poor countries can move to clean energy, poor families need access to cheap electricity so they don’t have to burn dung, cardboard, or twigs for heating and cooking. These dirty fuels produce indoor air pollution that is terrible for health (especially for children).”
In 2012, I wrote in the Huffington Post that Bill Gates had zero qualifications to understand energy and its costs. I also recognized that I am not qualified to run a global software company.
So, Bill Gates doesn’t know much about energy outside of his vested interests in nuclear power and I don’t know much about running a software company outside of my bumbling with my Android apps. I say this about myself even though I have helped with smart metering and oversaw the global implementation for monitoring solar systems worldwide for SunEdison.
But Bill Gates has more money and power than I, and a powerful and wonderful charity. However, in this instance his charity is misguided. And, nothing is more dangerous than misguided charity.
Gates' misguided path starts with the fact that he cited a notorious climate skeptic in Bjorn Lomborg. Lomborg has a stubborn refusal to acknowledge the fact that renewable energy is cost competitive with fossil fuels as an energy source.
With Gates, like Lomborg, framing energy-poverty as a climate issue reveals a depth of ignorance that poses a serious problem given Gates' stature. So here is reality.
Ending energy poverty has nothing to do with climate change.
The International Energy Agency has released a series of reports outlining how the world can end darkness for the 1.3 billion people who currently lack power. Those reports have made clear that their conservative approach (which relies in part on polluting power sources like coal) will only marginally increase carbon emissions. No one argues with this conclusion.
Ending energy poverty requires the right tool for the job:
Distributed Energy
The truth is an over reliance on centralized grid extension and large scale power plants will keep a billion people in the dark. It is time to recognize what even the IEA says is overwhelmingly necessary, but dramatically underinvested in: distributed renewable energy for those living beyond the grid.
To understand why this is so important take a step back and lets consider the reaction if Gates wrote a blog suggesting that Mark Zuckerburg was a fool and that the solution for universal Internet access around the world was physical fiber optic cable to every home around the world.The reaction would be riotous laughter. In emerging markets they are busy ripping out copper and everyone is using wireless.Yet that’s exactly what he’s proposing for energy.
No expert on energy access is paying any attention to
Gate’s folly on energy for the poor.
They know that Gates' approach has been tried for 60 years and has failed miserably in almost every emerging market outside of China.
The truth is knowledgeable entrepreneurs who have invested their lives and last dollar to this space and solve this problem are making rational business decisions.Those decisions are focused on the cheapest way to deliver energy. And, energy looks a lot like mobile phones - distributed solutions that leapfrog outdated and ineffective centralized networks. They have done so overwhelmingly out of the desire to power the poor - not to solve climate change. They just so happen to rely on the most affordable, effective and direct tool available: distributed clean energy that puts power directly in the hands of poor populations on a time frame that matters - now.
For proof on the power of distributed energy look at the growth rates in real world markets - not Gates’ blog.
The World Bank’s Lighting Africa program clocked a 95 percent CAGR (compound annual growth rate) for solar products being sold beyond the grid in sub Saharan Africa. In Bangladesh, the wildly successful IDCOL solar program has installed 3 million solar home systems at a whopping 60% CAGR over the past decade. After much deliberation, even the dispassionate new Prime Minister of India decided against grid extension in favor of using distributed energy to meet his 2019 goal of electrifying every family.
In the meantime, grid extension has proceeded at incredibly marginal rates. Worse, 2.5 billion people who are connected to the grid receive power that is so unreliable that they are considered ‘under-electrified’ by current grid extension efforts. The cheap reliable grid is a fallacy that is no longer cheap, nor reliable.
When it comes to energy poverty, Gates is arguing for outdated and ineffective solutions that will keep people energy poor.
It is time that we deploy our 21st century energy solutions and put power directly in the hands of the poor.
Photo: Ramin Talaie/Getty Images News
ETHYLENE ABSORBER , OXYGEN ABSORBER , WOOD PELLET . website: csy.international
7 年.
ETHYLENE ABSORBER , OXYGEN ABSORBER , WOOD PELLET . website: csy.international
7 年.
CEO/R M Chandler Consultants, LLC- Speaker & Consultant. Professor Emeritus/Northeastern University, research scientist (sociology), author/publisher. Professional artist/poet.
7 年I agree. Distributed networks as well as distributed renewables are working on a small scale in projects in Liberia in both Monrovia and in Buchanan City. At Grand Bassa Community College, a collaboration with India's Barefoot College in training rural women to be solar engineers. Gender/women's inclusion in distributed projects will hasten dvelopment if they'd only focus on smaller scale projects.
IRON ROOSTERS, LTD. Founder - CEO
7 年It bothers me when those who claim Corporate Status, Government Leadership or Economic Superiority and come up with ideas concerning Food Production, Climate Change, Freshwater access and Electricity solutions for Third World Countries and have never lived and worked for an extended time in a Third World Country. The Cost of electricity in most Third World Countries is prohibitive. If Mr. Gates wishes to pay for Solar Power Development in Third World Countries for free, then possibly it could work. When a third of the world’s population struggles daily to obtain food, shelter and water, electricity is in most cases an unattainable luxury.
Field Service Technician at Dominion Energy
7 年Renewable energy is out of reach for most of us in the developed world, despite government subsidies, How is it within reach for the most impoverished in the world. Sorry but I have to disagree.