BAGHDAD, March 7, 2007

Iraqis Have A Long Wait For Full Power

U.S. Officials Say Full-Time Electricity Won't Be On Nationwide For At Least Six Years

  • Many Iraqis use makeshift generators to compensate for electricity shortages.

    Many Iraqis use makeshift generators to compensate for electricity shortages.  (CBS)

  • Photo Essay Hunting The Insurgency

    CBS News' Cami McCormick goes on patrol with U.S. troops in southern Baghdad

  • Interactive American Heroes

    Profiles of U.S. soldiers who've died in Iraq, a look at the war's toll and pictures of mourning.

(CBS)  To get an idea of just how hard and how long-term the job of putting Iraq into some semblance of order and security will be, you only have to look at one thing: electric wires.

They cling like rat's nests along the sides of buildings, droop from poles and criss-cross streets and alleyways, CBS News correspondent Allen Pizzey says in an exclusive report.

Untangling the jumble and getting power flowing to everyone is a key wartime goal on which the U.S. has already lavished $4.2 billion. When President Bush announced the so-called "surge" of troops, he said the initiative must go "beyond military operations" and ordinary Iraqis "must see visible improvements."

But they won't see lights at the flip of a switch until 2013, six years from now and 10 years after the war began.

That's how long U.S. officials say it will take to fix the electricity, a disturbing timeline given that the restoration of basic and essential services is seen as a key element in gaining the confidence and support of normal Iraqis.

The challenge is epic.

The man in charge, Brigadier Gen. Michael J. Walsh of the Army Corps of Engineers, put it this way: "I've been an army engineer for 29 years, and this is the most complex environment I've ever worked on. It's like playing three-dimensional chess in the dark with someone shooting at you."

Even the successes are an ongoing challenge. By way of illustration, the general took CBS News to the Qudas power plant outside Baghdad. Built to have its turbines run on gas, the station will eventually, hopefully, put out between 200 and 260 megawatts, enough to power between 180,000 and 235,000 homes.

For the moment, however, the turbines that are functioning have to make due with crude oil pumped in from a field about a kilometer away. That means they have to run at less than optimal output and must be taken off line for cleaning more often. If one turbine breaks down, as it did recently, the problem becomes massive in every sense of the word. The only place some of the huge parts can be fixed is Holland.

Breakdowns, of course, are not something consumers want to hear about, although they are used to them. Power supplies across the country range from up to 20 hours a day in the Sulimaniyeh area in the north to as little as six hours a day in Baghdad. Many homes in the capital rely on local generators for power, production facilities so precious that many have armed guards to protect them. That's an easier job than protecting the national grid.

"There are 17,000 kilometers (10,000 miles) of cable," Walsh said, "so if an insurgency wanted to disrupt the power, they can certainly take a tower down, which is what they have been doing in the past, taking the tower down. But there's also other reasons: just thievery; knock a tower down, melt down the scrap metal and sell it for cable and things of that sort. So it's a very fragile system and hard to protect."

It's even more dangerous to maintain. According to official figures, insurgents last year killed 235 workers, kidnapped 311 and wounded 226.

Maybe that's why corruption is also rearing its ugly head. Haidar Abbas, who owns a small restaurant in Baghdad that serves shawarma to anyone who is willing to be frisked for weapons and suicide vests before entering, said Ministry of Electricity workers told him they could guarantee up to eight hours of power a day instead of the sporadic supplies he was getting, for a price. "They wanted me to pay 1,500 dinars (about $2) a day," he claimed, adding, "that shows me there is no problem with power. The problem is money."

In fact, nationwide the distribution of power has improved, and is again approaching pre-war levels. But demand has also gone up by 70 percent. It's a version of "can't seem to win for losing."


© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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by nolalou March 9, 2007 5:23 PM EST
lars008,

What , because someone disagrees with you they should leave the country? What about the so-called freedom we're fighting for in Iraq? They are allowed to have freedom, but we're not? If you want it live in a country where dissent is not allowed, then why don't you move to another country? N. Korea would be a good place! Oh, and don't let the door hit you on the way out!
Reply to this comment
by lars008-2009 March 9, 2007 4:41 PM EST
juliemd

the sooner you leave the better......

don't let the door hit you in the arse.....
Reply to this comment
by juliemd March 9, 2007 3:56 PM EST
Yep, and we were the ones who destroyed the electrical infastructure in the first place when we went in there under false pretenses and just plain Bush lies...so, we spend millions to destroy a country we're now spending billions to rebuild...makes me wanna go to Canada...
Reply to this comment
by dude622 March 9, 2007 12:14 PM EST
WHY DO WE AMERICANS HAVE TO SUPPORT THAT SAND PILE HALF WAY AROUND THE WORLD???? WHY DO WE HAVE TO SPEND 4.2 BILLION DOLLARS TO REBUILD THEIR ELECTRIC SYSTEM. WE COULD USE THAT MONEY TO STOP ILLEGAL DRUGS COMING INTO THIS COUNTRY!!! GEORGE W. BUSH AND THIS GOVERMENT WASTE MONEY ON A SAND PILE AND NOT PROTECTING AMERICANS FROM DRUGS. BUSH AND THE POLITICIANS WERE ELECTED TO TAKE CARE OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE!!! NOT SOME SAND PILE!!!
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by joanpz March 9, 2007 9:58 AM EST
and GW Bush RIDICULED 2003 statement by Kerry that AN IRAQ WAR WOULD COST 200 MILLION DOLLARS. Bush's FUZZY NUMBERS said: "This war WOULD NEVER COST 200,000,000 DOLLARS". WHO'S LAUGHING NOW...
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