Electricity in Nangarhar
There is very little electricity generated by Darunta Dam which is divided between the corrupt officials and a few hospitals and government offices in Jalalabad.
Households in Jalalabad buy electricity from these expensive community generators: $1.25/KW. Most families do not use heaters or air conditioners or anything that use a lot of electricity to save on bills at the end of the month. One generator powers about 60 households. These are private businesses and there are no regulations from the government and the business owners can charge people however much they want.
People mainly use it for lights and watching TV. In hot summer of Jalalabad, there is no way people can save by not running fans. People save up for the three really really hot months of summer when they’re running up the bill. Some people use another trick: If there is a government official who lives on their neighborhood and their power cable goes by their house, they would steal their electricity. It ain’t good if they find out. They have to take chances. The term use for stealing electricity is ‘Changak’ which literally means ‘secret connection’. Some families make a one-time big expense (if they can afford it) and get solar power system for their household.
Community generators are more common in rural areas of Afghanistan. In some areas where people do not have cash to pay, they give them wheat, rice or any other crops for the amount of electricity they’ve used in a certain period of time. Sometimes there is a set prices. Everyone for examples pays $20/month. Conditions apply. An example condition would be, every customer should use 25 watts energy efficient fluorescent lights.