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Nathan Jeffay

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Nathan Jeffay,

Nathan Jeffay

Analysis

Bedouin 'dream comes true' with solar field

February 23, 2012 13:50
1 min read

For decades, Israel's Bedouins have been searching for ways to end their longstanding poverty. But it may turn out that they have been staring, or rather squinting, at a solution all along.

The majority of Israel's Bedouins live in the scorchingly hot Negev desert, and now they are starting to harness the power of the sun to make money. Israel's Public Utility Authority has just granted a license for the first Bedouin solar field, which will be built over the next year in the village of the Tarabin clan, in the north-west Negev.

The Tarabin field will cover 37 acres and pump out eight megawatts of electricity per hour of daylight. It is being established by Arava Power, a company which opened its first field on Kibbutz Ketura last year and hopes to set up solar installations across the Negev. It has deals with four other Bedouin clans that await approval from the Public Utility Authority.

The company has significant investment from abroad, and has secured US administration funding to cover 80 per cent of installation costs for the Tarabin field. Arava Power President Yosef Abramowitz said that using solar installations to help develop Bedouin society is part of his company's social responsibility vision. "The idea is to transform the economic and social reality of the Bedouin in the state of Israel and take them from the poorest segment to have billions of dollars invested in the sector," he said.

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