Current:Home > MyQatar’s offer to build 3 power plants to ease Lebanon’s electricity crisis is blocked -Wealth Momentum Network
Qatar’s offer to build 3 power plants to ease Lebanon’s electricity crisis is blocked
View
Date:2025-04-11 12:50:37
BEIRUT (AP) — Lebanon’s political class, fuel companies and private electricity providers blocked an offer by gas-rich Qatar to build three renewable energy power plants to ease the crisis-hit nation’s decades-old electricity crisis, Lebanese caretaker economy minister said Thursday.
Lebanon’s electricity crisis worsened after the country’s historic economic meltdown began in October 2019. Power cuts often last for much of the day, leaving many reliant on expensive private generators that work on diesel and raise pollution levels.
Although many people have installed solar power systems in their homes over the past three years, most use it only to fill in when the generator is off. Cost and space issues in urban areas have also limited solar use.
Qatar offered in 2023 to build three power plants with a capacity of 450 megawatts — or about 25% of the small nation’s needs — and since then, Doha didn’t receive a response from Lebanon, caretaker Economy Minister Amin Salam said.
Lebanon’s energy minister, Walid Fayyad, responded in a news conference held shortly afterward that Qatar only offered to build one power plant with a capacity of 100 megawatts that would be a joint venture between the private and public sectors and not a gift as “some claim.”
Salam said that after Qatar got no response from Lebanon regarding their offer, Doha offered to start with a 100-megawatt plant.
Lebanon’s political class that has been running the country since the end of 1975-90 civil war is largely blamed for the widespread corruption and mismanagement that led to the country’s worst economic crisis in its modern history. Five years after the crisis began, Lebanon’s government hasn’t implemented a staff-level agreement reached with the International Monetary Fund in 2022 and has resisted any reforms in electricity, among other sectors.
People currently get an average of four hours of electricity a day from the state company, which has cost state coffers more than $40 billion over the past three decades because of its chronic budget shortfalls.
“There is a country in darkness that we want to turn its lights on,” Salam told reporters in Beirut, saying that during his last trip to Qatar in April, officials in the gas-rich nation asked him about the offer they put forward in January 2023.
“The Qatari leadership is offering to help Lebanon, so we have to respond to that offer and give results,” Salam said. Had the political leadership been serious in easing the electricity crisis, he said, they would have called for emergency government and parliamentary sessions to approve it.
He blamed “cartels and Mafia” that include fuel companies and 7,200 private generators that are making huge profits because of the electricity crisis.
“We don’t want to breathe poison anymore. We are inhaling poison every day,” Salam said.
“Political bickering is blocking everything in the country,” Salam said referring to lack of reforms as well as unsuccessful attempts to elect a president since the term of President Michel Aoun’s term ended in October 2022.
Lebanon hasn’t built a new power plant in decades. Multiple plans for new ones have run aground on politicians’ factionalism and conflicting patronage interests. The country’s few aging, heavy-fuel oil plants long ago became unable to meet demand.
veryGood! (171)
Related
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- See Pregnant Margot Robbie Debut Her Baby Bump
- Tearful Lewis Hamilton ends long wait with record ninth British GP win
- Tearful Lewis Hamilton ends long wait with record ninth British GP win
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- American citizen working for drone company injured in Israel
- 2 men drown in Glacier National Park over the July 4 holiday weekend
- Justice Department files statement of interest in Alabama prison lawsuit
- Stamford Road collision sends motorcyclist flying; driver arrested
- Read the letter President Biden sent to House Democrats telling them to support him in the election
Ranking
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Biden tells Hill Democrats he ‘declines’ to step aside and says it’s time for party drama ‘to end’
- Maui faces uncertainty over the future of its energy grid
- North Carolina can switch to Aetna for state worker health insurance contract, judge rules
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- American man detained in France after So I raped you Facebook message can be extradited, court rules
- 4 killed, 3 injured in Florence, Kentucky, mass shooting at 21st birthday party: Police
- David Byrne: Why radio should pay singers like Beyoncé and Willie Nelson
Recommendation
The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
Ice Spice Reacts to Festival Audience Booing Taylor Swift Collab
Julia Fox Comes Out as Lesbian
Indiana police standoff with armed man ends when troopers take him into custody and find boy dead
'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
David Byrne: Why radio should pay singers like Beyoncé and Willie Nelson
Group files petitions to put recreational marijuana on North Dakota’s November ballot
Kesha Addresses Body-Shamers in Powerful Message