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The Bujagali Hydropower Plant in Jinja, Uganda.
AKDN / Bujagali Energy Limited / Matthias Mugisha
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In Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India, a Self Help Group-run solar powered irrigation scheme was set up in April 2016 with the support of the Aga Khan Rural Support Programme (AKRSP). The scheme is run by 12 SHG members.
AKDN / Christopher Wilton-Steer
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Vanj Pamir Energy Hydro Power Plant, Tajikistan. PamirEnergy, a project company of the Aga Khan Fund for Economic Development, has won the 2017 International Ashden Award for Increasing Energy Access for its work bringing hydro power to 220,000 people in East Tajikistan and 35,000 people in North Afghanistan, as well as to many businesses, schools, and health centres.
AKDN / Christopher Wilton-Steer
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Bamyan Hospital, Afghanistan. The new hospital was built by the Aga Khan Agency for Habitat, which specialises in ecologically friendly and seismic resistant construction. Over half of the facility’s power is supplied by solar panels located on a hilltop behind the hospital. Photo: the director of the Bamyan Provincial Hospital takes his daily tour of all the sections and wards to assess the progress of the new hospital.
AKDN / Kiana Hayeri
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Khorog 1 Hydropower Plant, Tajikistan. Since 2002, Pamir Energy has restored 11 micro hydropower plants and upgraded 4,300 km of transmission lines, as well as distribution facilities.
AKDN / Christopher Wilton-Steer
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Центр управления электросетями Памирской Энергетической Компании, Таджикистан. Сегодня 91% домохозяйств (около 220 000 человек) в районе Вилояти Мухтори Кухистони Бадахшон (ВМКБ), где работает Памирская Энергетическая Компания, обеспечены чистой и доступной электроэнергией.
AKDN / Christopher Wilton-Steer
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Since returning from Russia to Deh village in 2006, Hamida has found daily life transformed by electricity. It has benefited women and girls in particular, as they no longer have to spend hours collecting fuelwood – which allows more time for education and income-generating activities. “I used to have to wash clothes manually for four hours every two days,” says Hamida. “Now it is 30 minutes in a washing machine so I have lots of time to do other things like spend time with the children. Before I would have to spent all day collecting wood, now there's no need."
AKDN / Christopher Wilton-Steer
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In Uganda, with the commissioning of Bujagali Hydropower, a project company of the Aga Khan Fund for Economic Development, the proportion of Uganda's electricity supply being generated from renewable sources rose to 90 percent, making the country's electricity supply one of the cleanest in the world. Since 2012, the project has been improving the quality of life for Ugandan in many different ways. For example, previously, the lack of a steady electricity supply hampered economic growth. With the addition of Bujagali hydropower to the grid, the steady supply of power allows businesses of all sizes to extend their service hours, expand their operations and attract investment. Photo: Kampala at night lit by Bujagali hydropower.
AKDN / Lucas Cuervo Moura
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In Uganda, the US$ 770 million Bujagali hydroelectric project is the country’s first private hydroelectric power project, and is expected to significantly lower the price of electricity in Uganda. In addition, the Project has built a new school and health centre to replace the facilities that were closed down as result of the dam construction.
AKDN / Zul Mukhida
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Site of Pamir Energy's new hydropower plant, around Murghab town and district, Tajikistan - one of the most remote parts of Tajikistan. At 4,000 metres above sea level not much grows here. Pamir Energy, an AKDN project company, is constructing a new hydropower plant out here in eastern Tajikistan, not far from the border of China, to ensure that even these most remote people, some 7,000 predominantly Kyrgyz nomads who have made this region their permanent home, can benefit from clean, reliable and affordable electricity.
AKDN / Christopher Wilton-Steer
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For those working at the Pamir Energy network control centre in Tajikistan, it is clear that the advent of hydro power has clearly affected the quality of life.
AKDN / Christopher Wilton-Steer
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In Afghanistan, with the support of the Aga Khan Foundation (AKF) and the United States, the remote communities of Brughel and Chehel Kahn in Wakhan, Badakhshan are building micro-hydropower units to increase access to reliable and renewable energy.
AKF / Andrew Quilty
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Over the last 10 years, the West Nile region in Uganda has been dramatically transformed. There are clear and apparent signs of socio-economic change in the area, as well as improvements in security and regional stability. Its largest town, Arua, has thriving industries, better social services and a cleaner environment. This transformation is testament to the role that access to reliable and affordable electricity plays in improving the quality of life in Arua district. The West Nile Rural Electrification Company (WENRECo), a project company of the Aga Khan Fund for Economic Development, invested in a hydropower station that now provides electricity 24 hours a day. Prior to the presence of WENRECo, founded in 2003, the service industry (including restaurants, bars and hospitality services) was rather stagnant, largely due to the absence of reliable and affordable electricity; and services, where available, were expensive. Since the commissioning of the hydropower project, there have been noticeable improvements in the service sector in Arua, including the opening of Internet cafés, car repair shops and hair salons. These businesses save significantly on costs now that they run on hydropower, as opposed to diesel power. The savings, in turn, are passed on to the customers, making products and services more affordable.
AKDN / Lucas Cuervo Moura
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As with all aspects of AKDN, investments are usually made for the long term, and hence projects need to be sustainable. In Côte d'Ivoire, IPS has been involved in the development of the Azito power station near Abidjan since 1997. Azito is becoming Côte d’Ivoire’s leading electricity supplier, with one of the most powerful and efficient thermal power plants in Africa. In 2015, Azito inaugurated its third turbine, powered exclusively by waste from the two other turbines – fulfilling another key objective for IPS: sustainable development.
AKDN
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The largest private sector power plant in Sub-Saharan Africa, Azito now provides over 30 percent of Côte d'Ivoire's electricity generation capacity.
AKDN / Lucas Cuervo Moura
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The Bujagali Hydropower Plant in Jinja, Uganda, built by AKDN and its partners, supplies nearly 50% of the country’s electricity. When it was built, it was the largest carbon offset project in Africa.
AKDN / Zahur Ramji
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In 2002, the Aga Khan Fund for Economic Development (AKFED), in partnership with the Government of Tajikistan and the International Finance Corporation, formed PamirEnergy. Since then, the company has repaired the electrical infrastructure of GBAO, expanded hydroelectric capacity and transmitted surplus energy from Tajikistan to Afghanistan.
AKDN / Christopher Wilton-Steer
Sustainable Development Goals - Affordable and clean energy
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Access to electricity is essential for a basic dignified standard of living. Without electricity, it is a struggle to receive adequate medical care, pursue an education, communicate and receive information, and earn a living. The Aga Khan Development Network operates a number of projects that help create clean energy. For example the Bujagali Hydropower Plant in Jinja, Uganda, built by AKDN and its partners, supplies nearly 50% of the country’s electricity. When it was built, it was the largest carbon offset project in Africa.
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