Lesson 1: Many highland villages have no electricity.
In practice, wherever there is national grid electricity, the material and spiritual life of the people is significantly improved. However, in many villages and hamlets in the highlands of the province, there are still many households that do not have access to the national grid, even villages with no grid. Bringing national grid electricity to highlands, remote areas, and ethnic minority areas is one of the top and urgent tasks of local authorities.
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About the "white" version of the grid
Cay So is one of the most remote and poorest villages in Nam Vi commune, Muong Nhe district, with 41 households and 246 people; 100% of them are poor and near-poor households. Most households here rely on light from oil lamps and flashlights. Only a few households with better conditions contribute money to buy mini generators that run on water power. We went to the house of Mr. Vang A Lu, the head of Cay So village. The house was very dark, the light bulb running on a mini water-electric generator gave off a dim light, making it impossible to see people's faces. In the corner of the house, a standing fan was covered with dust, left in the corner for a long time because the electricity and water were too weak to use. Mr. Vang A Lu shared: Every time I announced and organized a meeting with the people, it was very difficult and time-consuming because Cay So not only had no electricity but also no phone signal. When I had to deploy and carry out the work, I had to go from house to house, meet each person to deliver the news. There is no electricity to use loudspeakers, so even though the village cultural house was built a long time ago, every meeting has to be "hands-free" until the voice is hoarse.
Near the village chief Lu's house is the dilapidated wooden house of Mr. Lu A To. For more than half of his life, Mr. To has never lived in the light of electricity. Being the poorest or second poorest household in the village, his life was lacking in every way, so his daughter - Lu Thi Di dropped out of kindergarten... As the days passed, Di never left the village but only stayed in the dark house. In the highlands, it often gets dark early and there is no electricity, most of the people's activities must be done during the day to rely on natural light. The lives of the people here face many difficulties, slow development, high poverty rate, one of the reasons is the lack of electricity.
Night falls on Cay So, the space is quiet and still. Darkness covers the mountains and forests. Village chief Lu confided: We hope to soon have an electricity grid invested in the village. In many meetings with people, especially meetings with voters and People's Council delegates at all levels, Cay So people have requested that the village soon have national grid electricity, but so far it has not been able to become a reality.
Not only in Cay So village, currently in Muong Nhe district, there are still 12/115 villages without national grid electricity. Specifically: 4 villages (Huoi Lu 1, Huoi Lu 2, Huoi Lu 3, Tang Phon) with 128 households in Pa My commune; Cha Noi 2 village with 48 households in Quang Lam commune; Pa Tet village with 75 households in Huoi Lech commune; 5 villages (Ta Khoa Pa, Long San, Ta Lo San, Pa Ma, Lo San Chai) with 99 households in Sen Thuong commune. In particular, the district still has 855 households in extremely difficult areas without national grid electricity.
Long term difficulties
According to statistics from the Department of Industry and Trade, currently the whole province has 10,481 households in 245 villages (accounting for more than 7.5% of the total number of households in the province) without electricity, of which 129 villages have no electricity grid. The common point of these villages is that most of them are in remote mountainous areas, the population is not concentrated, so implementing electricity projects faces many difficulties, especially the high investment costs. For example, for the project to supply electricity to 15 villages, with more than 600 households in the communes of Sin Thau, Chung Chai, Muong Nhe, Muong Toong and Pa My (Muong Nhe district), to transport electric poles, equipment, workers are forced to open new roads. In addition, materials such as sand, gravel, and cement must be divided into small pieces and transported many times by motorbike from the commune and village center to the construction site; even carried on foot across the fields. Or the household electricity line in the villages: Nam Ma, Ao Ca, Muong Ten, Tong So (Pu Hong commune, Dien Bien Dong district) supplying electricity to 170 households is in the urgent stage of completion (reaching 50% of the project volume), but due to many days of rain, floods and landslides at the construction sites, the progress has been greatly affected.
Bringing electricity to rural areas, especially the Project on Rural Electricity Supply from the Provincial National Grid, is identified by all levels and functional sectors as an urgent task. However, according to information from the Department of Industry and Trade, the capital allocated for the Project on Rural Electricity Supply from the Provincial National Grid for the period 2021 - 2025 is very little. In addition, the Prime Minister has not yet approved the Target Program on Rural, Mountainous and Island Electricity Supply for the period 2021 - 2025.
Mr. Vu Hong Son, Director of the Department of Industry and Trade, said: To complete the goals of power supply programs and projects and the Resolution of the Provincial Party Congress for the 2020-2025 term, striving to have over 98% of households in the province using the national grid by the end of 2025 is a difficult and long-term task. Because in the process of implementing the project, not only capital but also difficulties in site clearance are encountered. In particular, some medium-voltage power lines have pole bases and corridors passing through natural forest areas, so it is necessary to carry out procedures to convert forest use purposes. This procedure is complicated and lengthy because it requires approval from competent authorities and the Prime Minister, which has greatly affected the progress of project implementation and settlement.
Lesson 2: Flexible solutions to bring grid power to highland areas
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