<p>Behind their homes is an oil pipeline and above them are high-voltage cables suspended between pylons. A little further off is a flare tower, burning off excess gas 24 hours a day.</p>.<p>Yet these potent symbols of Congo's oil and gas bonanza mean little to the villagers who live in their shadow.</p>.<p>When darkness falls, they have to fire up a generator or light lamps. None of their homes has mains electricity.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/opinion/main-article/right-to-free-food-and-the-economy-1150557.html" target="_blank">Right to free food and the economy</a></strong></p>.<p>"I'm 68 years old and I live in darkness," said Florent Makosso, seated beneath a giant banana tree.</p>.<p>"My parents and grandparents had a better quality of life when it (Congo) was French Equatorial Africa."</p>.<p>Makosso lives in Tchicanou, a small village 40 kilometres (25 miles) from Pointe-Noire -- the energy hub of the Republic of Congo, also called Congo-Brazzaville.</p>.<p>The former French colony gained independence in 1958 and became a major oil producer some two decades later.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/poverty-has-fallen-but-indias-social-inequality-increased-report-1141846.html" target="_blank">Poverty has fallen, but India's social inequality increased: Report</a></strong></p>.<p>It notched up sales last year averaging 344,000 barrels a day, making it the third biggest exporter south of the Sahara after Angola and Nigeria.</p>.<p>The country is sitting on 100 billion cubic metres (3,500 billion cubic feet) of natural gas -- more than the entire annual consumption of Germany, the world's fourth-largest economy.</p>.<p>But little of this wealth has translated into prosperity for the country's 5.5 million people -- around half live in extreme poverty, according to World Bank figures.</p>.<p>Tchicanou is emblematic of a community that suffers the downsides of fossil fuels but gets few of its benefits.</p>.<p>Surrounded by fruit trees, the village of 700 souls straddles Highway 1, the lifeline between the Atlantic port of Pointe-Noire and the capital Brazzaville.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/54-countries-could-see-poverty-levels-rise-without-urgent-debt-relief-un-1152620.html" target="_blank">4 countries could see poverty levels rise without urgent debt relief: UN</a></strong></p>.<p>Tchicanou and the neighbouring village Bondi host pipelines and pylons for carrying oil products and electricity.</p>.<p>But they find themselves in the same situation as communities in the remotest parts of the country -- they are still not hooked up to the national grid.</p>.<p>The village has no streetlights, and the biggest source of illumination comes from the flare tower at a nearby 487-megawatt gas-fired power plant, the country's largest.</p>.<p>"It's an ordeal living here," said Makosso.</p>.<p>"We have to buy generators, which are expensive, and running them is a challenge in itself."</p>.<p>Without power, "television and the other electrical appliances are just decoration," he said, pointing to the simple challenge of keeping food refrigerated.</p>.<p>A fellow resident, Flodem Tchicaya, said Tchicanou "is in a good location. But the only use of the gas that they burn here is to cause pollution and make us sick."</p>.<p>Roger Dimina, 57, said that access to electricity in Congo was "unfair."</p>.<p>"Instead of it starting at the bottom and heading to the top, it starts at the top and the bottom has nothing," he said.</p>.<p>Across Congo, electrification in urban areas reaches less than 40 percent of homes, while in rural zones, it is less than one home in 10.</p>.<p>In a recent interview in the Depeches de Brazzaville, the capital's sole daily newspaper, Energy Minister Emile Ouosso said the goal was to reach 50 percent by 2030.</p>.<p>A group close to the Catholic church, the Justice and Peace Commission, has been running an "electricity for all" campaign, focussing especially on villages in the orbit of Pointe-Noire.</p>.<p>The group's deputy coordinator, Brice Makosso, said the government has declared a budget surplus of 700 billion CFA francs (more than a billion dollars) for 2022.</p>.<p>Just a small amount of this could hook villages up to the grid, he said, pointing to duties that oil companies in the area paid to the government.</p>
<p>Behind their homes is an oil pipeline and above them are high-voltage cables suspended between pylons. A little further off is a flare tower, burning off excess gas 24 hours a day.</p>.<p>Yet these potent symbols of Congo's oil and gas bonanza mean little to the villagers who live in their shadow.</p>.<p>When darkness falls, they have to fire up a generator or light lamps. None of their homes has mains electricity.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/opinion/main-article/right-to-free-food-and-the-economy-1150557.html" target="_blank">Right to free food and the economy</a></strong></p>.<p>"I'm 68 years old and I live in darkness," said Florent Makosso, seated beneath a giant banana tree.</p>.<p>"My parents and grandparents had a better quality of life when it (Congo) was French Equatorial Africa."</p>.<p>Makosso lives in Tchicanou, a small village 40 kilometres (25 miles) from Pointe-Noire -- the energy hub of the Republic of Congo, also called Congo-Brazzaville.</p>.<p>The former French colony gained independence in 1958 and became a major oil producer some two decades later.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/poverty-has-fallen-but-indias-social-inequality-increased-report-1141846.html" target="_blank">Poverty has fallen, but India's social inequality increased: Report</a></strong></p>.<p>It notched up sales last year averaging 344,000 barrels a day, making it the third biggest exporter south of the Sahara after Angola and Nigeria.</p>.<p>The country is sitting on 100 billion cubic metres (3,500 billion cubic feet) of natural gas -- more than the entire annual consumption of Germany, the world's fourth-largest economy.</p>.<p>But little of this wealth has translated into prosperity for the country's 5.5 million people -- around half live in extreme poverty, according to World Bank figures.</p>.<p>Tchicanou is emblematic of a community that suffers the downsides of fossil fuels but gets few of its benefits.</p>.<p>Surrounded by fruit trees, the village of 700 souls straddles Highway 1, the lifeline between the Atlantic port of Pointe-Noire and the capital Brazzaville.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/54-countries-could-see-poverty-levels-rise-without-urgent-debt-relief-un-1152620.html" target="_blank">4 countries could see poverty levels rise without urgent debt relief: UN</a></strong></p>.<p>Tchicanou and the neighbouring village Bondi host pipelines and pylons for carrying oil products and electricity.</p>.<p>But they find themselves in the same situation as communities in the remotest parts of the country -- they are still not hooked up to the national grid.</p>.<p>The village has no streetlights, and the biggest source of illumination comes from the flare tower at a nearby 487-megawatt gas-fired power plant, the country's largest.</p>.<p>"It's an ordeal living here," said Makosso.</p>.<p>"We have to buy generators, which are expensive, and running them is a challenge in itself."</p>.<p>Without power, "television and the other electrical appliances are just decoration," he said, pointing to the simple challenge of keeping food refrigerated.</p>.<p>A fellow resident, Flodem Tchicaya, said Tchicanou "is in a good location. But the only use of the gas that they burn here is to cause pollution and make us sick."</p>.<p>Roger Dimina, 57, said that access to electricity in Congo was "unfair."</p>.<p>"Instead of it starting at the bottom and heading to the top, it starts at the top and the bottom has nothing," he said.</p>.<p>Across Congo, electrification in urban areas reaches less than 40 percent of homes, while in rural zones, it is less than one home in 10.</p>.<p>In a recent interview in the Depeches de Brazzaville, the capital's sole daily newspaper, Energy Minister Emile Ouosso said the goal was to reach 50 percent by 2030.</p>.<p>A group close to the Catholic church, the Justice and Peace Commission, has been running an "electricity for all" campaign, focussing especially on villages in the orbit of Pointe-Noire.</p>.<p>The group's deputy coordinator, Brice Makosso, said the government has declared a budget surplus of 700 billion CFA francs (more than a billion dollars) for 2022.</p>.<p>Just a small amount of this could hook villages up to the grid, he said, pointing to duties that oil companies in the area paid to the government.</p>