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Africa North
Egypt power cuts worsen
2013-05-29
Life sucks in a failed state...
CAIRO -- When his neighbourhood is plunged into darkness, high school student Maximos Youssef is forced to study for his year-end exams -- critical in determining his future job prospects -- by the light of a candle.

Youssef says he is in no mood to learn, and the flame only makes sweltering summer nights without fan or air conditioner even hotter. But, he says, "there is no other option. We have exams. We need to study."
Look kid, when I was your age I walked to school through waist-deep snow, uphill -- both ways...
The 18-year-old is one of millions of Egyptians whose tempers have been frayed by the recurrent power cuts hitting the country in recent days, blamed on -- and contributing to -- the nation's plummeting reserves of foreign currency.

The outages have sparked scattered street protests across Egypt and calls on social networking sites for people to stop paying electricity bills, compounding the challenges facing President Mohammed Mursi and undermining the Islamist leader's attempts to restore a sense of normalcy after two years of turmoil since the country's 2011 uprising.

Mursi says Egypt only has 80 per cent of its electricity needs met and that its turbines are outdated. "We have a real energy problem in Egypt," he told reporters over the weekend.
That's what happens when thugs run your country for about a thousand years...
A surge in crime, persistent street violence and political instability have compounded the crisis by scaring away tourists and investors,
...which virtually no one in Egypt considered until after it was too late...
leaving the country cash-strapped for fuel needed to keep power stations running.

In the southern city of Luxor, a popular tourist destination, the lights went out in the international airport and in ancient Egyptian temples recently --raising fears that the power outages will further sap tourism.

Fuel shortages have already impeded daily life for millions. For months, drivers have had to wait hours in long lines to buy subsidised fuel.
'subsidized' being a key part of the problem...
Some factory owners have turned to the black market to cover their needs.

While blackouts occurred under Egypt's longtime autocrat Hosni Mubarak, who was ousted in the uprising, they became more frequent last summer. As temperatures climb again this year they have become part of daily life, even in the most upscale districts of the capital. The outages have come to symbolise the disorder of the post-Mubarak era.

"It certainly is state mismanagement," said Saber Mohammed Saber, a 30-year-old chauffeur. "The president is not competent," he said. "This didn't happen in the time of Hosni Mubarak."
They just told you it did...
Mursi says his government is arranging to cut off electricity for a maximum of two hours twice daily, but residents of poorer towns and villages complain that the outages last much longer. Amir El Deeb, 29, who lives in the poor Boulaq El Dakrour district of Giza near Cairo, says lights go out five times a day there. He is particularly concerned because the holy month of Ramadan begins in July and those who observe the daytime fast often stay up late at night for prayers and meals.

The government has urged citizens to reduce electricity use during the summer. Last year, Prime Minister Hesham Kandil was mocked for advising citizens to gather at home in one room and wear cotton as a way to cut down on air conditioning use. Political satirists dubbed him "Hesham Cottonil", referring to one of Egypt's largest undergarment manufacturers.
It's actually a good idea: market prices for fuel, and don't buy what you can't afford.
Many said Kandil's comments revealed that Mursi's government does not have concrete solutions to the power crisis, which has been politicised by opposition groups who say the government is failing to provide basic services.

The Egyptian Social Democratic Party for example last week launched an initiative to allow students to study in their offices nationwide under battery-powered lights.

Mahmoud Ramzy of the party says Morsi's government is approaching the problem in the same manner as Mubarak did, leaving "the citizen to bear everything."

"This is a problem because at some point the citizen will feel that he is the state and that there is no institution or anybody above him," Ramzy said. Some are already refusing to pay electricity bills to protest the outages. Omar Wally, a founder of a campaign on Facebook to boycott paying electricity bills, says Mursi has been in power for almost a year and the problem appears to have worsened.

"The state must provide us with a service if it wants us to pay. If there is no service, we will not pay," Walli said.
Another brilliant thought. I have a suggestion: separate the utility from the government, and let it charge what it can for the service it provides...
Electricity Ministry spokesman Aktham Mohamed Abou El Ela told that the government has earmarked $200 million to be used by the Oil Ministry to buy fuel for power stations.
Egypt pumps natural gas from wells in the Sinai. The Israelis shortly won't need that NG anymore. How about getting some NG-powered turbines and using those to make electricity?
The Israelis mostly haven't been getting Egyptian natural gas since Mubarek fell -- remember how the pileline kept getting blown up?
The government is vying for a $4.8 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund
...another suckers bet to be covered by Uncle Sugar...
as one way to boost its foreign currency reserves, which have plummeted to $14.4 billion since the uprising. The reserves help pay for fuel subsidies that keep electricity bills relatively affordable.
Posted by:Steve White

#8  Hey, JFM said it. Mo didn't have electricity so why should these bozos?
Posted by: AlanC   2013-05-29 16:13  

#7  You're forgetting the Insha'Allan installation and maintenance crews

Not to mention the rampant corruption, both public and private.
Posted by: Pappy   2013-05-29 15:50  

#6  >The reserves help pay for fuel subsidies that keep electricity bills relatively affordable.

Obviously economics is not on the journalism curriculum.
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2013-05-29 12:40  

#5  Power? For what? For watching TV and surfing Internet? All of this is unislamic. In fact eleetrical devices are unislamic.

Problem solved.
Posted by: JFM   2013-05-29 12:39  

#4  He is particularly concerned because the holy month of Ramadan begins in July and those who observe the daytime fast often stay up late at night for prayers and meals.

Mo didn't have electrical power! And that fasting might be for a lot longer than Ramadan. Allahu Akhbar
Posted by: Frank G   2013-05-29 12:17  

#3  You're forgetting the Insha'Allan installation and maintenance crews, Jim.
Posted by: Mullah Richard   2013-05-29 12:05  

#2  Sell them Solar Cells, they require no fuel, it'll cut the fuel they use during the day, and allow the fuel to be burned at night.

HEY, 24 hour power.
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2013-05-29 10:37  

#1  Youssef says he is in no mood to learn

Students.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2013-05-29 03:28  

00:00