Hi Everyone!

At next week's Change seminar (Feb 14th), we will be hearing from Prof. June
Lukuyu from UW ECE. June's talk is titled "Spotlight Kampala: Illuminating
Energy Access Inequities in Informal Urban Communities".

Check out our website: www.change.washington.edu!

*Description*
Informal settlements (commonly known as slums) – home to nearly half of
sub-Saharan Africa’s urban population – face persistent inequities in the
accessibility, reliability, quality, safety, and affordability of
electricity service. Further, they face structural barriers to securing
legal access to the electricity grid. This has created a complex informal
electricity resale market of unmetered connections controlled by landlords
and informal electricians, providing a marginal level of grid access and
engendering new vulnerabilities. Illegally tapping into nearby distribution
infrastructure results in numerous fatalities from electrocution, leaves
households vulnerable to exploitation by intermediaries, costs utilities
millions of dollars annually, and destabilizes the local power grid. In
this talk, I will present some early findings from remote monitoring of
power quality and reliability conducted in 25 informal settlements in
Kampala by Spotlight Kampala – a research initiative aiming to offer
actionable insight into access challenges in informal communities Kampala.
The broad objectives of the projects are to gain insight into how community
members meet their energy needs, the prevalence of informal connections,
and for households and businesses that are connected (either formally,
informally, or both), is their connection safe, reliable, high-quality, and
affordable?

*Resources for Attendees*
None

*Seminar Details*
*Location*: Tuesdays from 12-1pm in 271 CSE2 (The Bill and Melinda Gates
Center)
*Zoom:* https://washington.zoom.us/j/93100061611

*Presenter Bio*
June Lukuyu is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Electrical and
Computer Engineering at the University of Washington. She recently received
her Ph.D. in ECE at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and an M.Sc. in
Renewable Energy Systems Technologies from Loughborough University. Her
research focuses on how to develop and plan for inclusive and sustainable
energy systems and technologies for underserved communities, centering on
promoting social development, sustainability, and human empowerment.
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