Renewable Energy and the Middle East
Revolutions
Mar 05, 2011 - Avril David - The CSR Blog
- blogs.forbes.com
As protesters across the Middle East continue
their fight for democracy and liberation, speculators have
drawn attention to the inevitable impact of this instability
and change on the oil and gas sector, in oil price spikes.
Looking at these two trends—calls for democratic
empowerment and spiking oil prices—it seems that
we could be nearing the time for seriously putting the
renewable energy discussion (and renewable energy partnerships)
back on the table.
On January 17 at the World Future Energy Summit in Abu
Dhabi, U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon called for a “global
clean energy revolution,” saying that “investing
in the green economy is not simply a luxury of the developed
countries. It represents opportunity for job creation and
economic growth in developing countries.”
As we hope for a sustainable and robust transition to
democratic empowerment in countries across the Middle East,
perhaps we can also begin envisioning what new models for
international energy partnerships might look like, models
that are based on a shared foundation of and commitment
to democratic empowerment. If handled right, economic growth,
political empowerment, and renewable energy solutions could
work together as a mutually reinforcing system in a newly
democratic Middle East.
Take the issues of Egypt as an example. According to the
U.S. Energy Information Association, Egypt’s oil
production peaked in 1996 at 935,000 barrels a day. Since
then, production has declined by nearly 30% to about 660,
000 barrels a day. Food prices in Egypt used to be subsidized
by oil revenues, and those subsidies were significantly
cut back, despite record high global food prices in 2010,
adding to the frustrations of an already struggling population.
According to the U.N. Population Fund, Cairo’s population
has nearly doubled over the past 30 years as many rural
poor have moved to the city seeking work. In addition,
an influx of refugees fleeing neighboring Sudan’s
civil war has added to the city’s population burden.
As a result, a new urban poor population has taken root
in Cairo, with the vast majority living in informal settlements
without access to electricity and without political clout.
To add to this already difficult picture, the city also
suffers from what water experts refer to as “genuine
water scarcity” (Pacific Institute, 2002), which
is caused by general climate dryness and large fluctuations
in the area’s limited rainfall. According to the
Pacific Institute’s Water Resources Index, Egypt
will be considered a “high stress” water region
by 2025, plagued by frequent shortages. Cairo’s growing
population adds to the city’s water management problems.
As more unplanned settlements are added to the city, the
eastern boundary of Cairo gets pushed further out to undesirable
lands in the desert without access to planned or natural
water sources.
Initiatives such as Desertec offer a possibility for how
the international community might start a new energy chapter
with the Middle East, one that provides a renewable energy
source, creates jobs, and increases potable water. According
to information on the Desertec website, Desertec involves “concentrated
solar power” stations based in the desert that would
supply energy to North Africa and the Middle East, with
excess energy being distributed to European Union countries.
Desalinated water produced during the solar energy production
process could be distributed to Egyptian settlements, increasing
the drinking water supply and improving public health;
improvements in public health are widely viewed in the
development community as a positive contributor to economic
development.
But Desertec is just one potential solution. As these
movements progress, it will be interesting to see if and
how we can work together with these countries to build
a more sustainable and empowered future—both environmentally
and politically.
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