Transformational Development In Decentralized Renewable Energy In Morocco
By Yossef Ben-Meir
Marrakech,
Morocco
What we know
Renewable energy (RE) sources power
transformational outcomes for community development projects
from all sectors. To secure cross-cutting benefits,
localized (or decentralized) RE initiatives need to embody
the same essential feature of sustainable projects in
general, which is that members of villages and neighborhoods
first identify and then implement their own priorities for
development and change.
Dialogue is the vital
action that forges mutually empowering relationships doing
measurable socioeconomic and environmental good for
community-driven projects. Free and sincere discussion
together with all interested and impacted groups is
critically necessary for engaging all parties in
multi-stakeholder action planning.
Morocco
provides the freedom to achieve personal and collective
development by integrating participatory approaches to
advance education, health, and economic growth. In Morocco,
civil society can flourish, people can gather, plant, and
act together for the advancement of their community and
municipality, and higher tiers—by program, charter, and
constitution—must be committed to fulfilling this with all
sectors.
Morocco has established policy
frameworks for sustainable development in decentralization;
RE; agriculture; multiculturalism; the family code;
south-south unity; regionalism; and fair open markets.
Moroccan public agencies understand the urgency for
development, and are likely to be fairly contributive when
they are properly informed of projects of interest as they
begin.
Consider the case of a three-year
decentralized RE program in the Marrakech-Safi region
enabling fruit tree agriculture and clean drinking water
systems, driven by a women’s cooperative in the Youssoufia
province and farming community members in the Al Haouz
province. This development experience involves: 1) a
multi-stakeholder partnership (MSP) with national and
regional representation from public and private sectors, 2)
funding and facilitation by this program (High Atlas
Foundation and Germanwatch), and 3) the emergence of lessons
informing policy reform.
What occurred in
regard to sustainable development, and how does that reveal
strategies for replication, scalability, and policies for
achieving participatory decentralized RE? The MSP elicits
dialogue from different sectors because best decisions
emerge from a collective point of view and direct
interaction toward shared understanding and
partnership.
Morocco needs a new Ministry of Decentralization
The High Atlas
Foundation (HAF) and Germanwatch (GW) played the essential
role of third party assistance for coordinating shared
planning and actions that achieve the three outcomes. The
necessity of this function in itself provides a critical
lesson. Capacity building with civil society organizations,
and even the delineation of a distinct ministry, is vital to
bring parties together for common action. The new ministry
would be a powerful fulfiller of this need, or the Ministry
of Environment, which already operates as a convenor among
other ministries, can be formally bestowed the
responsibility of building decentralized partnerships for
sustainability.
Moroccan national
decentralization and the enormity of such structuring across
the collaboration in all directions will not just happen
spontaneously. Projects need to be promoted by a vested
institution who takes on that primary function.
Decentralization—community control of development, and
personal and group empowerment—is about cross-cutting
action and follow-up, and people need to be trained and
supported, including financially, to be the facilitators of
Moroccan local and, ultimately, national
sustainability.
In this program, the Covid-19
experience exacted new operational reconsiderations. The
funding that would have gone to national and international
MSP conferences to promote decentralized RE instead went
toward community projects that manifest its reality for
rural disadvantaged people. Practical sustainability lies in
the beneficiaries’ implementation, which is also what is
really in the heart of the MSP members themselves.
Importantly, most appropriate and supportive policies could
not effectively be found without the experience and
foresight provided by real
application.
RE replication thrives on human development
What did we learn from
this experience that could inform our own efforts toward
replication, and what have we gained in terms of our
understanding of policy reform and renewal that would result
in rural communities across the kingdom coming together and
accomplishing their dreams through renewable
power?
RE by nature will always be bound to the
full landscape of human development. It inherently thrives
on decentralized systems because of its constant need to
adapt with local conditions. Thus, policies should reflect
that it is the beneficiaries who are able to identify the
particular qualities of the water-energy-food (WEF) nexus
suited to the factors occurring in their specific community.
In the interest of RE replication, supporting community
management is the best assurance of integration
possibilities.
If adaptive management rests on
local, biozone-specific data collection (in regards to
water, soil, air, and so forth), data analysis, and informed
decision-making, the decentralized system that then
manifests from the community discussions and collaboration
is symbiotic with adaptive practices. The considerations of
the forms of RE of a particular place are more readily
identifiable utilizing adaptive-related measurements.
Decentralization is built with the continued mounting of
more and more community-based sustainable
projects.
Clean drinking water remains the priority
What has not changed in rural
Morocco over decades is that clean drinking water remains
the most commonly expressed priority. The implications of
its lack of access are physically and socially destructive.
It oppresses health, women and girls (who are tasked with
retrieving water), and project prospects for basic quality
of life. The damage of lack of clean drinking water upon
children and families is incalculable. RE integrated with
clean drinking systems allows children to grow healthy and
girls to be freed from fetching water so they can attend
school.
Many clean drinking water systems that
a community fortunately has to meet their needs might still
malfunction because of households’ inability to pay for
the energy for pumpage. RE-powered water delivery, by
contrast, alleviates electricity and fossil fuel costs.
Furthermore, with RE, village associations—including the
ones in this program—still charge a fee (albeit a much
more affordable one) for groundwater in proportion to the
tonnage of water consumed by each household, which is enough
to deter water waste.
Communities must control their own development
Sustainability
means that communities control their own process of analysis
and means of evaluation of project priorities, action
planning, and management. Their vision and review of
personal and developmental life conditions allow for
decisions that enhance the likelihood of enduring benefits,
whether in RE or any social development direction they
determine. Therefore, if we seek decentralized RE, we need
to first effectively deliver personal and group empowerment
workshops that encourage discovery and confidence, leading
to participatory discussion about development. We need to
begin with building personal visions and affirmations to
persist and move forward concertedly.
When
agricultural projects occur with farming villages without
the Imagine women’s empowerment and rights-based
experience, household incomes and food security increases,
but women’s literacy and significant measurable women’s
and girls’-based benefits do not. The local women’s
cooperative in Youssoufia, Kounoze Lkdirate, went through
the Imagine workshop and participatory planning process,
ultimately leading to a clean drinking water system and
solar-powered regional nursery. A comparative
study shows that agricultural development preceded by
empowerment training leads to benefits including increases
in girls’ participation in education and more robust
cooperative development.
Key Findings
Morocco is positioned to accelerate
toward a sustainable development position with local
communities at the center through key national initiatives.
Not only has this fact enabled our relatively quick
implementation, but it also has allowed us to consider and
actually pursue strategies for
scaling.
Decentralized RE requires commitment
to funding beyond unexpected windfalls from uncontrollable
external circumstances, such as shifts due to Covid-19
realities. To implement community projects, programs need to
commit to funding where the people are and adapt to their
project sustainability.
Skilled and proactive
organizers make partner participation worthwhile with
greater inclusion. Community initiatives not only galvanized
the MSP, but are now making a profound life difference for
more than 1,000 people. Applied experiences illuminate
policy directions that promote replication, such as the
necessity of a new agency or ministry committed to
multisectoral collaboration at all levels for local
sustainability.
Yossef Ben-Meir is President of the High Atlas Foundation in Morocco, a civil organization dedicated to sustainable development.