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IRIN Africa | Great Lakes | CAMEROON-CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC-CHAD-CONGO-EQUATORIAL GUINEA-GABON | CAMEROON-CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC-CHAD-CONGO-EQUATORIAL GUINEA-GABON: Ministers says rural electrification a must in war on poverty | Economy-Health | Breaking News
Tuesday 20 December 2005
 
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CENTRAL AFRICA: Ministers says rural electrification a must in war on poverty


[ This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]


BRAZZAVILLE, 14 Jul 2005 (IRIN) - Energy ministers from countries in Central Africa said on Wednesday the provision of electricity must be part of their national strategic plans to end poverty.

Their appeal came at the end of a three-day workshop in Brazzaville, the Republic of Congo, on providing electricity services for rural development. Cheap and reliable electricity would, they said, introduce or modernise clean drinking water, education, health, communication and agriculture systems for millions of their rural poor.

Four of the six countries represented at this workshop are oil producers and, presumably, should be able to provide basic services. Yet, their nations rank low on the UN's global Human Development Index of 2004.

"In spite of the enormous energy resources in our area, its rate of electrification hardly exceeds ten percent," Bruno Jean Richard Itoua, the Congolese minister for energy told his colleagues from Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Republic of Congo.

The countries are members of the Economic and Monetary Community of Central Africa, also known as CEMAC, which organised the workshop with the European Initiative for Energy for the Eradication of Poverty and for Durable Development.

Itoua said region's electrification rate was the weakest of all subregions in Africa.

"This deficit in electric power constitutes a significant challenge," he said.

CEMAC countries are members of Central Africa Energy Pool, created in 2003 to ensure the production, transport, distribution and marketing of energy among its members. However, since its inception the Brazzaville-based body has not carried out a single project.

[ENDS]


 Theme(s) Economy-Health
Other recent Central Africa reports:

Congo River Basin, a reservoir of biodiversity threatened with extinction,  15/Feb/05

Leaders sign new treaty to protect rainforest,  7/Feb/05

New regional security mechanism,  20/Dec/04

Regional effort to promote relations between civilians, military,  9/Sep/04

Civilians, military seek ways to improve relations,  6/Sep/04

Other recent Economy-Health reports:

ZIMBABWE: Health budget fails to address brain drain, 16/Dec/05

CONGO: Brazzaville bans poultry imports over bird flu, 18/Oct/05

DRC: US $150 million grant from World Bank; $39.2 million loan from IMF, 2/Sep/05

RWANDA: New EU water project for Bugesera region, 21/Jul/05

IRAQ: Farmers in need of seed and equipment, 11/Jul/05

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