Gulf Today

‘A necessity,’ Lebanon’s forced conversion to solar

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TOULA: Thanks to solar energy, residents of the northern Lebanese village of Toula are finally able to enjoy ice cream again - a treat in a sun-baked country plagued by power cuts.

Lebanon’s economy collapsed in 2019 ater decades of corruption and mismanagem­ent, leaving the state unable to provide electricit­y for more than an hour or two per day.

Last winter, the mountain village of Toula barely had three hours of daily generator-driven electricit­y. Solar power now helps keep the lights on for 17 hours, an engineer working on the alternativ­e energy project said.

“For two years the kids have been asking for ice cream, now it’s finally time,” said Toula mini-market owner Jacqueline Younes, beaming.

“We are waiting for our first order of ice cream to arrive.”

While many Lebanese rely on costly generators for electricit­y, a growing number of homes, companies and state institutio­ns are turning to solar — not out of environmen­tal concern, but because it’s their only option.

Solar panels dot rootops and parking lots, powering entire villages — and even Beirut’s only functionin­g traffic lights, thanks to a local NGO.

“Solar energy is no longer an alternativ­e, it’s a necessity. If we hadn’t installed panels, the village wouldn’t have any electricit­y,” said engineer Elie Gereige, standing beside a sea of panels on a hilltop overlookin­g Toula.

Gereige is part of a team of volunteers who raised more than $100,000 from Toula expatriate­s to build a solar farm with 185 panels installed on church land.

They worked with the municipali­ty to feed the village generator with solar energy, cuting down on fuel costs while powering the entire community.

An hour’s drive south of Toula, a branch of Spinneys supermarke­t is also installing panels in the parking lot and rootop to slash its generator bills.

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