Solar power a life-changer for thousands of Syrian refugees in Jordan camp

A two megawatt solar power plant in Jordan's Azraq refugee camp will be a life changer for 20,000 refugees.

Syrian refugee boys gesture to the camera during the inauguration ceremony of a new solar power plant at the Azraq camp for Syrian refugees in northern Jordan on May 17, 2017.

Syrian refugee boys gesture to the camera during the inauguration ceremony of a new solar power plant at the Azraq camp on May 17, 2017. Source: Photo credit should read AHMAD ABDO/AFP/Getty Images

Before solar power came to the Jordan desert camp she now calls home, life was tough for Syrian refugee Racha Hadar and her eight children.

"Imagine life in this desert without a fan or cold water," she says, as the temperature outside her makeshift home hits 40 degrees Celsius (more than 100 Fahrenheit).

But today she watches television surrounded by her children, aged from three to 14 years old, under a large spinning ceiling fan.

"Things have changed. There are no more power cuts. We can drink fresh water," says Hadar, who fled war-torn Syria's Homs to arrive in the camp 18 months ago.

"Our life is better," she says, after a solar plant started operating at the camp in northern Jordan.
A Syrian refugee family walks towards the new Syrian camp of Azraq, which stretches for 9 miles, Wednesday, April 30, 2014.
A Syrian refugee family walks towards the new Syrian camp of Azraq, which stretches for 9 miles, Wednesday, April 30, 2014. Source: AP Photo/Raad Adayleh
Temperatures in the Azraq camp, around 100 kilometres (60 miles) east of the capital Amman, can soar to 50 degrees Celsius in summer and drop below freezing in winter.

The UN refugee agency (UNHCR) on Wednesday officially launched the $9-million solar plant at the camp that was funded by the Ikea Foundation.

The plant, which has a capacity of two megawatts, is first to provide around 20,000 of the camp's 35,000 residents with power for the first time in two and a half years.
It will provide electricity to "refugees living in two villages in the camp allowing them to light up their homes, connect fridges and TVs and maintain contact with their friends and families through charging their phones," says Stephano Severe, UNHCR representative to Jordan.

Electricity is then to reach the camp's remaining 15,000 residents at a later date, when its capacity reaches five megawatts.
Per Heggenes, CEO of the IKEA Foundation, turns of the solar energy plant that will provide 20,000 Syrian refugees in Azraq refugee camp with electricity.
Per Heggenes, CEO of the IKEA Foundation, turns on the solar energy plant that will provide 20,000 Syrian refugees in Azraq refugee camp with electricity. Source: AP

'A different life'

"The importance of electricity goes well beyond mere comfort. It impacts health, security, education," Severe says.

UNHCR deputy high commissioner Kelly Clements says Azraq was "the world's first refugees camp powered by renewable energy".

"We know that this will significantly reduce the cost of running this camp and we will be able to reinvest it in other ways in order to support refugees," she says.

Syria's war has killed more than 320,000 people since it started in 2011, and displaced more than half the country's population.

UNHCR says it has registered some 630,000 Syrian refugees in Jordan since war broke out in the neighbouring country, but Amman says the figure is more than one million.

Before the advent of solar power, cooking, cleaning, studying and even walking home safely after dark had become difficult for people in Azraq camp, which opened in 2014.

But since January 2017, parts of the camp have seen an almost uninterrupted and free supply of electricity, which should allow its management to save $1.5 million in running costs.
Per Heggenes, CEO of the IKEA Foundation, Kelly Clements, UNHCR Deputy High Commissioner, and others walk along the solar energy plant. Wednesday April 17, 2017
Per Heggenes, CEO of the IKEA Foundation, Kelly Clements, UNHCR Deputy High Commissioner, and others walk along the solar energy plant. Wednesday April 17, 2017 Source: AP
In the camp's central market, Amer Akla, a 32-year-old from Syria's Daraa, is delighted he now has power to cool the ice creams and fresh fruit juices in his shop.

Since he fled in 2013, "it's the first time we have something resembling normal life - even if we're still refugees," he says, serving a small girl an ice cream.

Farida, a woman in her 30s and a member of a family of 10 from Syria's Hama, is equally as happy for her grocery store.

"It used to be almost impossible to refrigerate anything. We'd buy ice blocks so produce stayed fresh," she says, the sound of fridges buzzing behind her.

"Now we have fridges that work, a fan, a television - a different life," she says.

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4 min read
Published 18 May 2017 7:24am
Updated 18 May 2017 7:35am
Source: AFP


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