If you all remember, at a class discussion hosted by Dr. David Benac, he had made a point about leap frogging technology in the developing world. Obviously the development of developing countries is of great interest to me. So, the first source I read tackles whether developing countries can skip the centralized electrification system and why it is so difficult for developed countries to do that.
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| William in Malawi builds turbines for villages |
Therefore these developing countries find themselves investing a lot of resources in grid expansion and still have a large amount of the population without electricity. While, the introduction of solar panels which can work for individual homes are easily installed and applies, because the grid infrastructure is not too efficient it is easy to override and leapfrog to new technology. While in developed countries since there has been so much investment into the current grid, and most homes are connected in each grid it makes it difficult to apply these new technologies to a grid.
Another interesting fact I read is that the United Nations has an initiative that was introduced in 2012, with the aim to provide universal access to modern energy services by 2030. Which I didn't know about.
Still have lot of research to do, but so far the topic seems interesting.

This sounds like a great topic, Bethel, though I wish the study had found that it would be easy for other countries to leapfrog the technology and go straight to sustainable energy. No easy solutions.
ReplyDeleteThat is really interesting, how the way our cities and neighborhoods are set up effect our energy sources so much. I hadn't thought of it in those terms before.
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