Develop renewables while sun shines

For a country receiving 3,200 hours of sunshine each year and blessed with wide, flat open plains, it is a cruel irony that no large-scale solar industry exists, particularly when demand is indicated by the perennial shortages of electricity.

When sunshine is available across the country for 73 percent of the annual daylight period, it is disturbing that homes and businesses suffer the anxiety of precarious electricity supply, when clean solar alternatives are glaringly available. Clean, yes, but not cheap, at least not at capital expenditure level. And therein lies the rub. As cost effective as solar is in the long-term and as naturally abundant as it is, high initial costs mean it is limited to small domestic or industrial level, while the coal-fuelled national grid yearns for alternative support.

It is curious then that other economies as close as South Africa and Namibia, have been able to initiate – to various extents – some form of national level solar generation.It is also curious that at home, where the BPC is the largest generator of power and the single buyer of all independent electricity, policymakers have thus far been unable to think around the capital intensity of solar generation.

Editor's Comment
Stakeholders must step up veggie supply

The Ministry of Agriculture, local producers, retailers, and industry associations must work together to overcome the obstacles hindering vegetable production and distribution.This collaborative approach is essential to improve the availability, quality, and affordability of vegetables in the market.Firstly, the Ministry of Agriculture should provide support and guidance to local farmers to enhance their productivity and efficiency. This could...

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