Submitted by calbert1735 t3_10j4rsv in worldnews
Seeker_Of_Knowledge- t1_j5ispbg wrote
Just an interesting fact. People in Lebanon and some other parts of the world get only one hour a day of electricity.
rafdotcom t1_j5j2r7t wrote
We in South Africa are heading that way. Currently up to 10h a day without electricity
DemonPoro t1_j5jlivi wrote
Hello from Ukraine. Can we join the club? Similar situation 6-10h without electricity per day.
rafdotcom t1_j5jnq21 wrote
Sorry that you joined, but yours is no fault of own, seems like the Russians had a part to play in you joining our club
Our government created the mess we in. Like they knew about it and did nothing significant to alter course.. headed right into .. now we just another failed state
Kidog1_9 t1_j5k237c wrote
Somehow, you described what happened in Sri Lanka with near-perfect accuracy. Edit : and what's happening in Pakistan
Icy_Tomatillo2699 t1_j5lh6g7 wrote
A political and constitutional crisis emerged in Pakistan from, 3 April 2022 to 10 April 2022 when, National Assembly's Deputy Speaker Qasim Khan Suri dismissed a no-confidence motion against Prime Minister Imran Khan during a session in which it was expected to be taken up for a vote, alleging that a foreign country's involvement in the regime change was contradictory to Article 5 of the Constitution of Pakistan.[1] Moments later, Khan stated in a televised address that he had advised President Arif Alvi to dissolve the National Assembly. Alvi complied with Khan's advice under Article 58 of the constitution. This resulted in the Supreme Court of Pakistan (SCP) taking a suo moto notice of the ongoing situation, creating a constitutional crisis, as effectively, Imran Khan led a constitutional coup.Four days later, the SCP ruled that the dismissal of the no-confidence motion, the prorogation of the National Assembly, the advice from Imran Khan to President Arif Alvi to dissolve the National Assembly, and the subsequent dissolution of the National Assembly were unconstitutional, and overturned these actions in a 5-0 vote. The Supreme Court further held that the National Assembly had not been prorogued and had to be reconvened by the speaker immediately and no later than 10:30 a.m. on 9 April 2022.
On 9 April, the National Assembly was reconvened, however the motion was not immediately put to a vote. The session went on all day but the voting did not begin. Shortly before midnight, the speaker and the deputy speaker both resigned.
Shortly after midnight on 10 April, the National Assembly voted and passed the no-confidence motion with 174 votes, a majority, removing Khan from office,and making him the first prime minister in Pakistan to be removed from office through a no-confidence motion.
And after that it was a literal war between the current government and the people because almost everyone liked khan's government.
soulhot t1_j5k34z7 wrote
I genuinely am sorry for the South African people because they had such high hopes when Mandela was freed and its so sad to see what’s happening.
I just realised it sounds like I don’t think it’s terrible in other countries.. I didn’t mean it that way.. it’s tragic for all people’s in this day and age. Basic human rights, safety and expectations should be every governments first concern.
majortung t1_j5mpm6r wrote
In Durham, the locals were looting Indian shops and went on rampage attacking Indians.
69_queefs_per_sec t1_j5jqa6o wrote
Fucking hell, and I got mad when the power went out for 30 minutes yesterday in Bangalore (there's a diesel generator so honestly it wasn't even an issue). I can't imagine life in SA. Such a beautiful country deserves better.
ExchangeKooky8166 t1_j5k3p8a wrote
South Africa is that way because the African National Congress has been laughably corrupt and incompetent since Mandela left office in 1999.
Tragic tale of a country. Without Mandela, South Africa would have probably collapsed economically and then into an awful civil war. However, there was no strong leader after him to keep the economic and social progress that was gained from 1995-2007.
No, this isn't apartheid apologism. The National Party were just as shitty and apartheid is responsible for many long-term social issues in South Africa. The ANC just make it worse.
Speculawyer t1_j5kojc7 wrote
Eskom is a mess. It is so coal dependent and coal is expensive. But they don't seem to have the money or willpower to switch from coal to solar PV and wind.
And now I presume a lot of wealthy people are switching to battery backed solar PV so you get the utility death spiral.
RansomStark78 t1_j5lj2fb wrote
Everything else you mentioned costs more per kwh than coal
Speculawyer t1_j5lp1uk wrote
RansomStark78 t1_j5lr78j wrote
I did a quick Google search
Rsa has some of the world's cheapest coal
So USA reports are meaningless
RansomStark78 t1_j5lplc1 wrote
Link to a article that does not factor in USA specific subsides
I don't think rsa gets us money as subsides
Speculawyer t1_j5ls9vi wrote
This article covers UNSUBSIDIZED prices (see first graph). When subsidized, it is so cheap that it causes existing plants to close down (second graph).
RansomStark78 t1_j5lvezo wrote
You mention that wealthy rsa citizens are switching to solar and t his will lead to failure of the national power producer
I googled there are only 400 000 za citizens that make above 1 000 000 zar as per za tax stat
1000000 at xe rate is approx 60 000 usd
There are approx 60-80 mil ppl in rsa
How does 400 000 (possibly half that in number households given that higher in comers earners marry other higher incomes earners)
Result in a income deficit enough to cause the power utility to go into red
RansomStark78 t1_j5lx9qa wrote
A 15 min google search
Za current renewables are at r 2,02 kwh ( 2012)
15 year life span
but customers are paying r1, 62per kwh
So coal must be cheaper than renewables
Also most heavy users are in the north most energy renewables are in the south
Za do not have transmission capacity to take the power to the north so having more renewables will not help
Apparently transmission capacity is at 100% in the south
[deleted] t1_j5lu9x7 wrote
[removed]
NofksgivnabtLIFE t1_j5j9cqq wrote
Bless you folk. Fuck the systems of oppression no mater where we all are from. Basic human rights are deserved by ALL!
TheOwlDemonStolas t1_j5k2i1g wrote
Wait, you are heading that way? Like, it get's worse? Shouldn't it be the reverse? What's the reason for this.
rafdotcom t1_j5kb2p2 wrote
Basically government policies and not educating its population.. after 30 years the cracks are showing. We have massive urban decay in our major population centres and no maintenance done on critical infrastructure.. Where I reside each day without electricity means the water supply is affected and we without water almost every time the power goes out.. the power goes out every few hours :(
TheOwlDemonStolas t1_j5kc5g3 wrote
That sounds really rough. I am sorry to hear that. :/
AmeriToast t1_j5m542e wrote
Man that does suck. I still remember when everyone was talking about how south Africa was on its way towards becoming an economic powerhouse in Africa.
Wrong_Adhesiveness87 t1_j5jnyzl wrote
How do people work?? Imagine noone can really have a fridge
Seeker_Of_Knowledge- t1_j5jzbfk wrote
It is really hell on earth. I have relatives who live there and for the most, they are using other forms of food reservations besides fridges (salt, dry meat...)
They have small batteries that they recharge in this one hour that they can use for one light in the house for the rest of the day.
Horror-Childhood6121 t1_j5kccd0 wrote
Not having a refrigerator is hell on earth?
Seeker_Of_Knowledge- t1_j5kdf7t wrote
The life there in general. Refrigerator is only one problem among the countless ones they have.
Horror-Childhood6121 t1_j5kfbme wrote
But we're talking about the lack of electricity here. Having lived off grid for almost 10 years, the first few without refrigeration, it was hardly hell on earth.
rezzbian419 t1_j5khi59 wrote
you’re pointing out that you voluntarily lived off grid, while lebanese citizens are not choosing to live like this — their gov is subjecting them to it
Horror-Childhood6121 t1_j5khxdj wrote
I agree completely with your assessment, ..but srsly..hell on earth? Also seems like power outages are somewhat common ..
rezzbian419 t1_j5kkxl3 wrote
seems that you’re completely ignorant on what’s going on in lebanon if you are still hung up about refrigerators
Horror-Childhood6121 t1_j5klpz6 wrote
Woyld you describe Lebanons lack of electricity as "hell on earth"?
Seeker_Of_Knowledge- t1_j5kmhuu wrote
I would describe not having food to eat and none of the government facilities working as intended and not finding jobs and a full month of your work is only worth 100$ where the prices went ×50 higher as hell on earth.
rezzbian419 t1_j5knfr8 wrote
yes how is this even a question
RealisticEmployment3 t1_j5m7s27 wrote
Hyperbole, look it up
Iron-Doggo t1_j5krtcr wrote
But you had time, money and knowledge of how to effectively live off grid. These people do not. That is why it was a smooth transition for you and a rough transition for them. They don’t have the advantages you do that enable you to live comfortably off grid. It’s a struggle for survival for them. For you it’s just a relaxing way of life.
Horror-Childhood6121 t1_j5kw9z4 wrote
It was no smooth transition for me..but not comparing to this. Relaxing? You have no idea..but again, just put that in as I have lived without electricity.. in our part of the country we have regular outages so even when we were on the grid, it was something we deal with regularly. Parts of our county were out of electricity for almost 2 weeks recently.
Hardly " hell on earth".
However it seems that the power grid in these places has been unreliable for many many years, and lack of electricity is not an unusual situation. So they have had time.
Gr8gaur t1_j5jpstd wrote
Because when u have forex of just $4.3 billion, of which $3 billion are loans begged from Saudi, China etc... importing luxury cars worth $1.2 billion is more important than arranging wheat and electricity.
A true banana republic !
Sans_Pression t1_j5m0bct wrote
It's getting worse in many parts of the World. Power outages are now reccurent in Syria, Sri Lanka, Egypt and Sudan. What corruption + inflation does to a motherfucker. Also Venezuela but thats socialism.
Lawfulness_Character t1_j5lbv43 wrote
I was in an island village in Colombia last week where they pay the equivalent of $80 USD/Month for power 6 hours per night during low period for all of the resorts around them that get 24/7 electricity.
Drak_is_Right t1_j5peoej wrote
Diesel is expensive right now and a lot of these islands run on it
prodbywetpaint t1_j5pyfjm wrote
Wait really? Any article for this? Generally curious how people live like this.
Seeker_Of_Knowledge- t1_j5qc4n9 wrote
My uncle just emigrated from Lebanon a few months ago and when he came to Canada, he couldn't believe the difference at the beginning, it was a shock for him.
https://www.energyforgrowth.org/memo/a-power-and-economic-dual-crisis-lebanons-electricity-sector/
Little old article, but what I can tell you is that it got much much worse as of now compared to a year ago.
Just search "Lebanon Electricity Crisis"
prodbywetpaint t1_j5qe9g2 wrote
Oh that sucks. But that "one hour power".......is that real too?
Seeker_Of_Knowledge- t1_j5qeie9 wrote
Yes, unfortunately.
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