A new program in the South American country will provide 2 million of the nation’s poorest people with free electricity.
Peru initiated the The National Photovoltaic Household
Electrification Program, which aims to install over 1,600 solar panels
in the province of Contumaza. This will provide 126 poor communities
with electricity, and is the first of many upcoming projects, reports
The Huffington Post.
According to PlanetSave.com, Peru’s Energy and Mining Minister Jorge
Merino said the program aims to provide electricity to 95 percent of the
entire nation by 2016. At present, only about two-thirds of the nation
is powered.
The program aims to install 12,500 solar panels in seven other
provinces, providing power to more than 500,000 homes at the cost of
around $200 million.
“This program is aimed at the poorest people, those who lack access
to electric lighting and still use oil lamps, spending their own
resources to pay for fuels that harm their health,” Minister Merino told
the Latin American Herald.
Peru is home to 24 million people, and is the home to the first major solar power installation in Latin America.
Courtesy: http://digitaljournal.com/
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