Minister of Energy and Mineral Resources, Dr. Saleh Kharabsheh, announced that the Higher Steering Committee of the Rural Electrification Fund approved the provision of electricity to 238 homes and locations during the month of June, at a total cost of approximately 542,000 Jordanian dinars.
اضافة اعلان
Dr. Kharabsheh explained that the committee approved a number of projects and sites to be connected to the electrical grid at the expense of the Rural Fund. These include residential clusters and economic activities, in line with the recent amendments expanding the criteria for electricity access.
Eng. Hisham Al-Momani, Director of the Electricity and Rural Electrification Directorate at the ministry, presented the project details, noting that the decisions covered residential clusters of five homes located outside zoning boundaries, with a total cost of 238,000 dinars.
The committee also approved projects for clusters of at least three homes outside zoning limits, at a cost of 105,000 dinars, in addition to individual houses located outside zoning areas but near existing electrical networks, with a total cost of 28,000 dinars.
Al-Momani noted that the list also included homes of underprivileged families located within zoning boundaries and electricity company service areas. The total cost to connect these homes was 8,000 dinars, as part of the government’s support for low-income citizens.
The committee further included productive farms (poultry, cattle, sheep, and fish) located in poverty pockets outside zoning boundaries among the supported projects, with a cost of 12,000 dinars, reinforcing the ministry’s efforts to support farmers, develop livestock resources, and enhance self-sufficiency.
Additionally, the committee approved lighting for roads leading to cemeteries to facilitate nighttime burials, with a cost of 2,000 dinars.
According to the approved criteria, the Rural Fund supports productive, industrial, and investment projects outside zoning boundaries and within development zones, provided they create job opportunities for Jordanians in those areas. The committee approved an 18,000-dinar contribution to such projects.
Al-Momani stated that 24,000 dinars were allocated to support farms with artesian wells located outside zoning limits, as part of efforts to strengthen the agricultural sector and support food security.
He also pointed out that the Rural Fund has contributed 12,000 dinars over the past ten years to increase the capacity of transformer stations, aiming to improve electricity quality and reduce technical losses.
In the field of renewable energy, the committee approved the installation of grid-connected solar panel systems for 95 homes of underprivileged families benefiting from the National Aid Fund. This initiative aims to reduce their monthly electricity bills and improve their income and living standards.