THE HINDU Editorial Vocabulary - May 2, 2018 - Topic 1
Access to electricity drives
the productivity of households, empowers women and enables education and
communication. Millions of homes still lack this vital resource in India. And
as of April 1, 2015, the official count of unelectrified villages was 18,452.
So when Prime Minister Narendra Modi recently announced that all inhabited
villages now enjoy electrification, it signalled a significant milestone in the
country’s development. It is an achievement that will raise aspirations in the
remotest districts.
Yet, broad-brush statistics conceal severe disparities,
including the actual number of households in villages that have power
connections, the number of hours they get reliable power, and the per capita
power that rural and urban Indians consume. For one, the existing
definition to declare a village electrified is coverage of a mere 10% of
households and common facilities such as schools, panchayats and health
centres. The claim of electrification pales when viewed against some of these
realities. Rural household electrification has a wide range across States, from
47% to 100%. The average hours of power supplied in a day to rural areas in
January 2018 ranged from 11.5 in Mizoram, 14.91 in Haryana and 17.72 in Uttar
Pradesh to 24 hours in Kerala, Gujarat and Tamil Nadu. These anomalies are
often the result of infrastructure deficits and administrative inefficiency and
they show that, even with supportive Central schemes, the Power for All 24x7
goal adopted by States and Union Territories with a deadline of April 1, 2019
is far from realistic.
Census data for 2001 and
2011 indicate that the number of rural households that use electricity as their
primary source of lighting rose by about 12 percentage points to 55.3%, while
in that decade urban households rose five points to 92.7%. The per capita
consumption between rural and fast-rising urban India also represents a
challenge, since there is a divergence between the two. There are twin
challenges to be faced in improving access and equity. To many, the falling
cost of renewable, decentralised sources such as solar photovoltaics represents
a ready solution for rural India. Yet, the evidence from States such as
Maharashtra, which made an early claim to full electrification six years ago
relying partly on solar power, shows that theft, damage and lack of technical
capacity can pose serious hurdles. The answer may lie in a hybrid solution that
ensures continued scaling up of both grid-connected and standalone solar
systems in appropriate areas, augmenting conventional sources of electricity,
with a clear emphasis on rooftop solutions for cities. Cheaper renewables will
enable differential pricing for households in remote areas, a key determinant
of wider social benefits of electricity. Rural electrification in India has
been a long effort, achieving rapid growth from the Third Plan to the Twelfth
Plan, but getting affordable power to every household needs sustained policy
support.
Vocabulary
Empower: give someone the authority or power to do
something.
Example: Nobody was empowered to sign checks on her behalf
Synonyms: authorize, entitle, permit, allow, license, sanction
Inhabited: live in or occupy a place or environment
Example: A bird that inhabits North America
Synonyms: live in/on, occupy, settle
(in/on), people, populate
Achievement: a thing done successfully, typically by effort,
courage, or skill.
Example: To reach this stage is a great achievement
Synonyms: attainment, realization, accomplishment, fulfillment, implementation
Raise: lift or move to a higher position or level.
Example: She raised both arms above her head
Synonyms: lift, lift up, hold aloft, elevate, uplift, upraise
Reliable: consistently good in quality or performance; able
to be trusted.
Example: A reliable source of information
Synonyms: dependable, good, well-founded, authentic, valid, genuine
Mere: that is solely or no more or better than what is
specified.
Example: It happened a mere decade ago
Anomaly: something that deviates from what is standard,
normal, or expected.
Example: There are a number of anomalies in the present system
Synonyms: oddity, peculiarity, abnormality, irregularity, inconsistency
Realistic: having or showing a sensible and practical idea of
what can be achieved or expected.
Example: Jobs are scarce at the moment, so you've got to be
realistic
Synonyms: practical, pragmatic, matter-of-fact, down-to-earth, sensible
Consumption: the using up of a resource.
Example: Industrialized countries should reduce their energy
consumption
Synonyms: use, using
up, utilization, expending, depletion, waste
Divergence: the process or state of diverging.
Example: The divergence between primates and other groups
Synonyms: separation, dividing, parting, forking, bifurcation
Affordable: inexpensive; reasonably priced.
Example: Affordable housing
