By Distributing Free CFL Light Bulbs, Hugo Chávez Slyly Gains More Political Power and Saves Venezuela Electrical Power
Several weeks ago, Venezuela President Hugo Chávez provided free energy-saving light bulbs to some low-income residents of Houston, Texas. This magnanimous act probably gained him a few American fans. In late March of this year, he also announced his plan to fund “an energy revolution” in Venezuela.
The revolution has an emphasis on using Venezuelan produced products like PVC pipes to construct homes. Another major component of the revolution includes an initiative to make Venezuela more self-sufficient in food production, thus quelling the need to import food. Projects to provide additional electrical power through alternative energies like wind and solar technologies are also commencing.
The most notable and measurable success to date for the so-called energy revolution, however, has been Venezuela’s effort to change out standard light bulbs across the country for CFLS (energy-saving compact flourescent light bulbs) exactly like those Chávez donated to Texans. So far, 72.3 million light bulbs have been changed. But the story is perhaps not as simple as it would seem (as is almost any story about Chávez and his schemes).
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One would think that by using less of their own natural resources to obtain power, Venezuela would be thus gaining economically. Critics of Chávez claim, however, that by distributing free light bulbs, he has provided himself with a smokescreen for not addressing the need to overhaul and expand the country’s electrical power system.
Last year it was announced that the electrical system for the country might break down. The website petroleumworld.com, a source that covers news about energy, oil, and gas in Latin America, describes why this situation will cause more and more blackouts to occur throughout Venezuela:
… last year when the [electrical] system was on the brink of a crisis and its possible collapse was announced, the government’s brilliant response was to hand out energy-saving light bulbs and put the domestic electricity system under state ownership with the purchase of Electricidad de Caracas (EDC), the country’s largest private electricity utility, and Seneca, the electricity utility servicing Margarita Island.
As a consequence of these purchases, not only were resources spent unnecessarily instead of using them to speed up the investments the country urgently needed, but also, a year after the purchase, the services provided by these companies are showing clear signs of deterioration, a fate they share with all the companies that have passed into state ownership.
In other words, they claim that Chávez employed a strategy that would score him more political points with Venezuela’s poorer citizens, for whom energy is expensive– all while avoiding to take on the challenge of a much greater long-term problem.
Nonetheless, this is not to say that the changing of light bulbs is insignificant as an economic and environmental improvement for Venezuela. For citizens it means less money spent on bulbs over time as energy costs increase, and for the world it means less carbon emissions coming out of Venezuela that would contribute to global warming. For Chávez though, perhaps it’s just another detail in his increasingly eventful and fascinating presidency.
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Photo Credit: Agencia Brasil via WikiMedia Commons under a Creative Commons license









At the beginning of this article you sounded balanced, then you started to deviate from reality.
The energy saving program used in Venezuela originated in Cuba, Fidel Castro was the one who came up with the idea of changing to fluorescent bulbs due to the Island’s energy problems and guess what? they obtained substantial savings, then Chavez repeated the program in Venezuela and have also obtained substantial savings. 2000 megawatts or roughly US$2billion per year. If you in the US would do it the savings might reach 500 billions/year but that would be too much money the private industry won’t get from you the consumer therefore very unlikely it will happen. Your government will never donate bulbs nor hire people to come to your house to install them as Chavez has done.
As for the oil and electrical industry decadence, this is more political attack than reality, no doubt the electrical system needs to be updated, and that is ongoing with billions of dollars in investement, 80% of the energy used in Venezuela is generated by dams and there are 2 more in construction along with the update of distribution nets etc.
You in the USA also have major problems with yout energy distribution networks, or have you forgotten the blackouts seen in the past?
So it seems this article has the purpose of misleading instead of informing.
Sadly typical - this man is a tyrant.
I agree with Palomundo
PH - maybe you should read Confessions of an Economic Hit Man…