LAGOS, Nigeria — WE call it light; “electricity” is too
sterile a word and “power too stiff, for this Nigerian phenomenon that can buoy
spirits and smother dreams. Whenever I have been away from home for a while, my
first question upon returning is always: “How has light been?” The response,
from my gateman, comes in mournful degrees of a head shake.
Bad. Very bad.
The quality is as poor as the supply: Light bulbs dim
like tired, resentful candles. Robust fans slow to a sluggish limp.
Air-conditioners bleat and groan and make sounds they were not made to make,
their halfhearted cooling leaving the air clammy. In this assault of low
voltage, the compressor of an air-conditioner suffers — the compressor is its
heart, and it is an expensive heart to replace. Once, my guest room
air-conditioner caught fire. The room still bears the scars, the narrow lines
between floor tiles smoke-stained black.
Sometimes the light goes off and on and off and on, and
bulbs suddenly brighten as if jerked awake, before dimming again. Things spark
and snap. A curl of smoke rises from the water heater. I feel myself at the
mercy of febrile malignant powers, and I rush to pull my laptop plug out of the
wall. Later, electricians are summoned and they diagnose the problem with the
ease of a long acquaintance. The current is too high or too low, never quite
right. A wire has melted. Another compressor will need to be replaced.
For succor, I turn to my generator, that large Buddha in
a concrete shed near the front gate. It comes awake with a muted confident hum,
and the difference in effect is so obvious it briefly startles: Light bulbs
become brilliant and air-conditioners crisply cool.
The generator is electricity as electricity should be. It
is also the repository of a peculiar psychology of Nigerian light: the lifting
of mood. The generator is lord of my compound. Every month, two men filled with
mysterious knowledge come to minister to it with potions and filters. Once, it
stopped working and I panicked. The two men blamed dirty diesel, the sludgy,
slow, expensive liquid wreathed in conspiracy theories. (We don’t have regular
electricity, some say, because of the political influence of diesel importers.)
Now, before my gateman feeds the diesel into the generator, he strains it
through a cloth and cleans out bits of dirt. The generator swallows liters and
liters of diesel. Each time I count out cash to buy yet another jerrycan full,
my throat tightens.
I spend more on diesel than on food.
My particular misfortune is working from home. I do not
have a corporate office to escape to, where the electricity is magically paid
for. My ideal of open windows and fresh, breathable air is impossible in
Lagos’s seething heat. (Leaving Lagos is not an option. I love living here,
where Nigeria’s energy and initiative are concentrated, where Nigerians bring
their biggest dreams.) To try to cut costs — sustainably, I imagine — I buy an
inverter. Its silvery, boxlike batteries make a corner of the kitchen look like
a physics lab.
The inverter’s batteries charge while there is light,
storing energy that can be used later, but therein lies the problem: The device
requires electricity to be able to give electricity. And it is fragile,
helpless in the face of the water pump and microwave. Finally, I buy a second
generator, a small, noisy machine, inelegant and scrappy. It uses petrol, which
is cheaper than diesel, and can power lights and fans and freezers but only one
air-conditioner, and so I move my writing desk from my study to my bedroom, to
consolidate cool air.
Day after day, I awkwardly navigate between my sources of
light, the big generator for family gatherings, the inverter for cooler nights,
the small generator for daytime work.
Like other privileged Nigerians who can afford to, I have
become a reluctant libertarian, providing my own electricity, participating in
a precarious frontier spirit. But millions of Nigerians do not have this
choice. They depend on the malnourished supply from their electricity
companies.
In 2005, a law was passed to begin privatizing the
generation and distribution of electricity, and ostensibly to revamp the old
system rooted in bureaucratic rot. Ten years on, little has changed. Most of
the companies that produce electricity from gas and hydro sources, and all of
the distribution companies that serve customers, are now privately owned. But
the link between them — the transmission company — is still owned by the
federal government.
I cannot help but wonder how many medical catastrophes
have occurred in public hospitals because of “no light,” how much agricultural
produce has gone to waste, how many students forced to study in stuffy, hot air
have failed exams, how many small businesses have foundered. What greatness
have we lost, what brilliance stillborn? I wonder, too, how differently our
national character might have been shaped, had we been a nation with children
who took light for granted, instead of a nation whose toddlers learn to squeal
with pleasure at the infrequent lighting of a bulb.
As we prepare for elections next month, amid severe
security concerns, this remains an essential and poignant need: a government
that will create the environment for steady and stable electricity, and the
simple luxury of a monthly bill.
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie is the author,
most recently, of the novel “Americanah.
Source:The New York Times
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