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rural electrification : ウィキペディア英語版
rural electrification
Rural electrification is the process of bringing electrical power to rural and remote areas. Electricity is used not only for lighting and household purposes, but it also allows for mechanization of many farming operations, such as threshing, milking, and hoisting grain for storage. In areas facing labor shortages, this allows for greater productivity at reduced cost. One famous program was the New Deal's Rural Electrification Administration in the United States, which pioneered many of the schemes still practiced in other countries.
At least a billion people worldwide still lack household electric power - a population equal to that of the entire world in the early 19th century.
As of the mid 2010s an estimated 200 to 300 million people in India (20-25 percent of the total population) lack electricity as well as 7 out of 8 rural Sub-Saharan Africans. Many more receive only intermittent and poor quality electric power.〔〔http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2012-08-01/worst-india-outage-highlights-60-years-of-missed-targets-energy〕 In 2012 Some 23% of people in East Java, Indonesia, a core region, also lack electricity, as surveyed in 2013.〔http://www.tempo.co/read/news/2013/12/31/058541136/23-Persen-Penduduk-di-Jatim-Belum-Dapat-Listrik〕
It is estimated that the absolute number of people without power was growing until the late 1980s when rural electrification programs, particularly in East Asia outpaced the growth of population.〔http://www.energyfordevelopment.com/2014/11/rural-electrification-by-numbers-1970_2.html〕〔http://iis-db.stanford.edu/pubs/22224/Rural_Electrification_China_Peng.pdf〕 Up from about 1.84 billion in 1970, approximately 2.01 billion (equal to the world population in 1927)〔https://drive.google.com/file/d/0BzGm4KSaHH_GUWhubTVQZFNRcmc/view?pli=1〕 people in developing countries still lacked household electric power in 1990 (the year the World Wide Web was invented) 〔 - about 38 percent of the world's population at that time, 51 percent of the population of so-called developing countries, and 67 percent of rural parts of the developing world.
The IEA estimates that, if current trends do not change, the number of people without electricity will rise to 1.2 billion by the year 2030. Due to high population growth, the number of people without electricity is expected to rise in Sub-Saharan Africa.
==Benefits==
In impoverished and undeveloped areas, small amounts of electricity can free large amounts of human time and labor. In the poorest areas, people carry water and fuel by hand, their food storage may be limited, and their activity is limited to daylight hours.
Adding electric-powered wells for clean water can prevent many water-borne diseases, e.g. dysentery, by reducing or eliminating direct contact between people (hands) and the water supply. Refrigerators increase the length of time that food can be stored, potentially reducing hunger, while evening lighting can lengthen a community's daylight hours 〔 allowing more time for productivity.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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