top of page
haylizraineyteter

Life Without Electricity: How to Save Energy and Natural Resources for Future Generations



We are still unable to fully do our duties without electricity. The majority of our household equipment would not function without energy. We would experience a complete breakdown of our fans, processing plants, tube lights, bulbs, and electric irons. Electricity is crucial to many of our sectors. Because it is a part of daily life, electricity is significant. You depend on electricity for many things, including heat, light, and medical equipment like ventilators and respirators. Without electricity, we would be helpless.Modern life depends heavily on electricity, which is also crucial to the American economy. Electricity is used by people to run appliances, computers, computers, machinery, and public transit systems as well as for lighting, heat, cooling, and refrigeration.




life without electricity an essay



The development of industry in the modern age is entirely a miracle of electricity. In every factory, it is the electric current that turns the wheel. The country who can produce sufficient electricity for industrial and domestic use can manage to progress speedily. The total industrial produce and commercial turnover of a country depend on the quantity of electric power available to it industry and transport. Electricity has not only revolutionized our industry and commerce, it has also brought for us great facilities in the field of education and health. Treatment by X-rays and electropathy would have impossible without the help of electricity. Diagnosis and surgeries in many complicated health problems are done only with the help of electric power and for almost, all chemical preparations and medicines electricity is a must. Even in the field of education, we find electricity very useful. Education via internet, television and tape-records has been possible only with the help of electricity.


This progress also holds true when we look at the total number of people without electricity access. In 2015, the total number without electricity fell below one billion for the first time in decades; very likely the first time in our history of electricity production.3


Here we see a regional shift in electricity access over the past few decades: in 1990, nearly half (45 percent) of people in the world without access lived in South Asia. By 2016 this had shifted significantly: the largest share now lives in Sub-Saharan Africa (which is now home to nearly two-thirds of the world population without electricity access).


Power outages pose serious problems in terms of safety, domestic life, transportation, work, heating, nutrition, leisure and healthcare. European cities are dependent on electricity to function. How can we become less vulnerable to power failures and mitigate their effects on urban areas?


Most urban citizens rely heavily on electricity in daily life. The pumps bringing water to apartments and houses are dependent on electricity. This means that the water would seize to flow in high-rise buildings in case of a power outage. On lower floors, water availability will worsen as water towers run out of water. Heating systems are also dependent on electricity, and so are fridges and freezers. In case of a power outage lighting, ventilation systems and other appliances used on a daily basis would also stop working.


There are important functions in our society that cannot function without electricity. One example is grocery stores. The most acute problems for stores of any size facing power cuts is related to cooling and heating of food products, and payment activities which are increasingly electronic. In the case of extended power cuts, problems will spread to storage management and ordering, and thereby supply chains. Hospitals are also dependant on electricity. In the absence of power, surgeries are at risk, respirators shut down, and hygiene is threatened. Waste management may also be affected if dependent on pressure piping, which requires electricity to function.


A life without electricity may feel distant for most inhabitants of European cities. But it is not as unlikely as one might believe, and when it happens we must be prepared. With just a few measures city planners can contribute to preventing power outages and mitigating the negative consequences.


Pasi Haravuori is a senior advisor in electrification and automation at Sweco in Helsinki, Finland. Since joining Sweco in 2001, Pasi has worked on electrification projects in the process industry and distribution segments. Pasi is interested in how electricity distribution and safety systems can become a functional and natural part of the everyday life in industry and cities. Pasi holds an M.Sc. in Energy Technology and has broad experience of electrification and automation. Pasi is currently department manager for Sweco Industry, Finland. By working with new technology and smart innovation models, Sweco is planning better, smarter industry and cities of the future.


Electricity is one of the most important blessings that science has given to mankind. It has also become a part of modern life and one cannot think of a world without it. Electricity has many uses in our day to day life. It is used for lighting rooms, working fans and domestic appliances like using electric stoves, A/C and more. All these provide comfort to people. In factories, large machines are worked with the help of electricity. Essential items like food, cloth, paper and many other things are the product of electricity.


The lack of electricity in my village meant that we could only prepare food using firewood or charcoal. The process of getting firewood made all of us children very sad. As a child it was my first duty to help my mother gather firewood and bring it home from the bush. The farm where we could collect the firewood was about five kilometres away and we had to go there on foot. Gathering firewood is one of the most tedious activities for anyone living in a place without electricity.


Achieving the Millennium Development Goals or new sustainable development goals will be elusive without a clear focus on energy access. Poverty cannot be halved if people do not have electricity to bring out the potential in them and transform their communities. Let us all support the effort to make energy deficiency a thing of the past.


Globally, the number of people without access to electricity declined from 1.2 billion in 2010 to 759 million in 2019. Electrification through decentralized renewable-based solutions in particular gained momentum. The number of people connected to mini grids has more than doubled between 2010 and 2019, growing from 5 to 11 million people. However, under current and planned policies and further affected by the COVID-19 crisis, an estimated 660 million people would still lack access in 2030, most of them in Sub-Saharan Africa.


Whether you are passionate about 'getting off the grid' or simply know that you are going to have to deal with a power outage in the near future, you are going to have to know how to live without electricity. While it might sound unnatural to live without all the electrical items that play a large part in our lives, living without electricity has been something humans have done since the dawn of man. With determination, a positive attitude, and a bit of ingenuity you too can live without electricity, be it for just a day or the rest of your life.


Imagining what it would be like to survive a day without technology makes the IT skills gap difficult to fathom. Frankly, daily life without modern technology would be miserable. So why does such a critical skills gap exist?


The village of Sadikpur is a good place to gain an understanding of life without electricity. It's about a five-hour drive from Delhi in India's most populous state of Utter Pradesh, in the north of the country.


No, my aversion to electricity began, as far as I can trace it, in reaction to finding out, when I was 12, that Lake Erie was officially dead, flooded with toxins from factories on its shore, and that not a fish could live in it anymore. This was the late 1960s, so my solution took the form of a vague lifelong hippy notion of getting back to nature, manifested in a disdain for fashion, gadgets, new buildings, the space programme, men with short hair, pharmaceutical companies, witch-burning and the Industrial Revolution.


Before Benjamin Franklin figured out electricity, we all lived without it. Nearly 250 thousand Amish people still live without electricity today, not to mention the thousands of people in developing countries.


No electricity meant no fans or air conditioning. This surprisingly is one of the hardest things for most people during summer who choose to live without electricity. I personally have trouble sleeping during really hot summer nights.


The closest I get to living with electricity is when we go camping in our 5th wheel. But we are not completely without. Our 5th wheel has solar panels. My son has medical conditions that we can not be with out power. But certainly limits us when we camp off grid. Our battery reserves are saved for the most important things, my sons respiratory equipment.


We are a family of four and use, per our electric company, a average of 9 to 10 KWh a day. Have lived without electric a few times in my adult life due to blackouts or when going camping. Lost power for 13 days after Sandy. Like someone mentioned in a previous post, still had access to electric off premise. Know I can cut more. For example substituted refrigerator/freezer unit with a chest freezer for 3 months a few years ago. Wasnt tough, saved on electric, and worth it. Went back cause wife didnt want to do it anymore. I admire all of you who have been able to cut the juice. Wish I had both the knowledge and will power.


While you still may have a roof over your head without electricity, life would be unrecognizable from today. We are dependent on the electric street lighting for safety and ease of getting around at night.


Indeed, if the power were switched off tomorrow, the great majority of us would cease overnight living like kings with almost absolute control over the convenience and comfort of our lives. Instead, we will be left pondering the sobering realities of a new world without electricity. 2ff7e9595c


0 views0 comments

Recent Posts

See All

コメント


bottom of page