She said efforts by the global community to
contain the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic are suppressed by electricity
supply challenges.
Ogunbiyi, who is the Special Representative
of the UN Secretary-General for Sustainable Energy for All, gave the warning in
an article published by Thompson Reuters Foundation News.
In the opinion piece titled: “Power in a
pandemic – why energy access matters during Coronavirus”, Ogunbiyi stated that
the social distancing and stay-at-home measures adopted by many countries could
only work where there was stable and sufficient power supply.
But this is not the case in Africa and
parts of Asia with an estimated 840 million people, mostly in sub-Saharan
Africa, living without access to electricity, she submitted.
“As the virus spreads, especially across
Africa and parts of Asia, one of the most used preventative measures is a luxury
not all countries can afford.
“Social distancing and stay-at-home
measures being adopted in many countries are predicated on an important
assumption: that populations have access to reliable, affordable electricity to
stay connected and continue to communicate with public services and one another
remotely.
“The reality is 840 million people,
predominantly in sub-Saharan Africa, are living without access to electricity
and hundreds of millions more only have access to very limited or unreliable
electricity.
“Many of these people, largely women,
reside either in crowded cities or rural areas.
“‘Sheltering in place in such areas for
long periods may not be possible as energy is needed to cook and store food, or
to cool homes,” she said.
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