Friday, July 23, 2010

We've got the power

I'm ever so glad I no longer live in Sharjah. The daily commute to Abu Dhabi is bad enough from the Crumbling Villa. It would be intolerable if I had to do the Sharjah schlepp to Dubai too. In fact, I only ever lived in Sharjah at all because that's where I worked. And as Beloved Wife absolutely refused to live in Grumpy Goat Towers, I moved out a couple of years ago.

The past few years have seen increasing strains put on Sharjah's electricity system. The increase in numbers of residences and businesses has outstripped the electricity and water authority's (SEWA's) ability and/or inclination to provide more 'lectric or sufficient electric string to deliver it.

Result: rolling power cuts. An hour or two once in a blue moon might, in extremis, be tolerable. This is what happened with tedious regularity when I first moved into a flat in Abu Shaghara district, and I lived in perpetual fear of being trapped all night in the lift.

But now we have reports of huge power cuts lasting hours and hours. Frozen foods are ruined; people are trapped in lifts; traffic lights don't work. And when it's pushing 40C at night and close to 50C in the heat of the day, the lack of air conditioning is not trivial.

Massive numbers of the affected population live in apartment blocks. Unlike traditional houses, and exactly like modern, traditional-looking houses, the residences are not designed to function without air conditioning. With neither aircon nor insulation there's no way to pump out the heat that pours in through the walls.

What solutions are on offer?
  • Sleeping in your air-conditioned car is possible.

  • A paraffin stove in your high-rise might be the only way to get cooked food.

  • It might be possible to run a portable air conditioner off a petrol-powered generator.

But these solutions are fraught with their own set of problems:-
  • Carbon monoxide poisoning.

  • Food poisoning from putrid defrosted and inadequately cooked food.

  • Apartment blocks burning to the ground.

All these problems and more, available to Sharjah residents as a result of SEWA's inability or unwillingness to provide the services for which they charge.

]}:-{>

3 comments:

Unknown said...

Excellent blog and nice post,

I appreciate your contents,

Hanan Nagi,
UAE International Speaker, Coach and Executive HR Trainer
Youtube Channel - My YouTube Channel
Website My Website

Gnomad said...

Wasn't there a similar problem not so long ago with a lack of capacity in the sewer system? Surely it cannot be that difficult to ensure that the infrastructure is in place before additional development takes place? Oh hang on, that would involve joined-up thinking......

Keef said...

There ort to be a lore against it.

 

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