What Rick Perry Got Wrong 国产视频 Energy and Sexual Violence in Africa
Last Thursday, U.S. Energy Secretary Rick Perry, who鈥檇 recently returned from a trip to Africa, that expanding fossil fuel production is key to preventing sexual violence against women on the continent. In Perry鈥檚 own words: 鈥淏ut also from the standpoint of sexual assault. When the lights are on, when you have light that shines, the righteousness, if you will, on those types of acts.鈥
We could give Perry the benefit of the doubt and assume that he can鈥檛 possibly think that sexual assault against women only happens in the literal dark. But Perry also has a penchant for , and in his clumsy effort to pander to compassionate Americans and to connect the administration鈥檚 push for increased U.S. fossil fuel production to the larger discussion of sexual assault that cracked open last month, he gets crucial facts very wrong.
Perry is correct in asserting that energy development, generally, can aid in preventing violence against women. In their on gender and energy access, consultant Kathleen O鈥橠ell and her colleagues describe the impact energy access can have on women, explaining that 鈥渆nergy increases productivity and enables new industries to thrive, ultimately contributing to improved social and economic outcomes for individuals.鈥 And, in reducing the time needed for household work via electrification, women have freedom to explore economic opportunity. In turn, economic independence can allow women to free themselves from, and at times avoid, violent situations.
What Perry gets wrong, though, is that fossil fuels are the way to do this.
To meet increased energy demands, Africa will have to triple its energy output by 2030. Sure, current fossil fuel mechanisms will contribute to this, but from Perry鈥檚 own Department of Energy shows that wind and solar energy鈥攏ot fossil fuels鈥攚ill be a far more cost-efficient, environmentally friendly way to build this capacity. Moreover, on a continent that suffers from poor grid connectivity, harnessing alternative energy resources can lead to electrification in places that otherwise can鈥檛 access power. Creating micro-grids鈥攐r local sources of energy that don鈥檛 need to be connected to a central utility鈥攊s faster and more cost-effective than building traditional utilities and the high-voltage power lines needed to distribute their energy.
Contrary to Perry鈥檚 comments, it鈥檚 the rapidly falling cost of renewables that gives Africa a historically unique opportunity to develop without the pollution that has perennially plagued so many other rapidly industrializing regions the world over.
But Perry鈥檚 blunder goes deeper still. He also fails to note that countries with economies dependent on fossil fuels have worse governance generally鈥攊ncluding poor outcomes for women. Discovering mineral resource wealth can be a blessing to a poor country by 聽providing it with the means to secure social and economic welfare for its citizens. However, it more often than not ramps up or perpetuates bad governance.
This political phenomenon is known as the 鈥渞esource curse,鈥 or the 鈥減aradox of plenty.鈥 Many countries throughout the world have been beleaguered by this phenomenon, squandering their quickly earned resource wealth鈥攆rom, for instance, fossil fuels鈥攐n flashy architecture or even on cash handouts for residents, rather than using this wealth to build institutions or to invest in the welfare of citizens. Azerbaijan is an all too familiar example of the resource curse. Its 鈥溾 and other glitzy architectural projects line the skyline of the capital, Baku, while the authoritarian government has built up its security forces and tightened social controls, to say nothing of how it鈥檚聽failed to distribute its oil wealth in meaningful ways.
It鈥檚 these poor governance outcomes鈥攆rom authoritarianism and militarization, to a lack of transparency, to increased corruption鈥攖hat contribute to the oppression of women. On top of that, an over-reliance on fossil fuels would likely crowd women out of the job market, given that the few highly paid jobs in the sector . At least in part due to an economic phenomenon known as 鈥溾濃攐r a sharp increase in the inflow of foreign currency, which can trigger currency appreciation, making the country鈥檚 other products less price competitive on the export market鈥攋obs traditionally held by women in textile production or other, similar industries disappear.
Without employment and attendant economic independence, women become more vulnerable to sexual assault and other forms of social and political degradation.聽聽
As the secretary of energy, Perry needs a better understanding of international energy economics and their impact on women. If he truly wants to help African women, he can do so by promoting development aid and by ratcheting up access to renewable energy鈥攏ot by merely acting as a shill for American fossil fuel companies that will likely only increase pollution and other corrosive outcomes as Africa continues to push for new, better ways to provide electricity to its people.