Energy Policies For Refugee Assistance: Sustainability And Access

A Congolese woman, displaced from a surrounding village, cooks with a fire inside Kibati camp in Goma, North Kivu province, Democratic Republic of the Congo on Nov. 26, 2008.

Energy Policies For Refugee Assistance: Sustainability And Access

Energy Policies For Refugee Assistance: Sustainability And Access

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/arielcohen/2022/08/14/energy-policies-for-refugee-assistance-sustainability-and-access/?sh=6f71508a76a8

Author: Ariel Cohen

Refugees crowded into squalid camps is not a new mental image. The numbers of refugees are continuing to climb globally. This year 274 million people were recorded to be in need of humanitarian assistance, of which 100 million are refugees. The Russian invasion of Ukraine not only brought this to Europe but to many states in the global south dependent on Ukrainian foodstuffs. This humanitarian crisis is not just a disaster on its own terms but is also an underappreciated part of our modern energy crises. Paradoxically as more and more people are forcibly disconnected from energy grids and forced into refugee camps, these individuals’ per capita energy consumption increases despite individuals using less. Paradoxically as more and more people are forcibly disconnected from energy grids and forced into refugee camps, these individuals’ per capita energy consumption increases despite individuals using less.