WEBVTT 00:00:06.076 --> 00:00:11.166 $10,000 - that's the price Pyi Rar and her fellow villagers were told to pay 00:00:11.541 --> 00:00:14.184 if they wanted electricity in their small community 00:00:14.428 --> 00:00:16.366 in Eastern Myanmar's Kaya state. 00:00:16.817 --> 00:00:20.184 She used her local money lender to raise her $80 share 00:00:20.586 --> 00:00:23.109 - a huge amount in this impoverished region. 00:00:23.193 --> 00:00:25.649 But ten months later there's still no power 00:00:25.829 --> 00:00:30.529 and authorities say villagers have to come up with more cash if they want to get connected. 00:00:30.806 --> 00:00:35.186 If we had electricity, we could cook and use computers and the children could study. 00:00:35.290 --> 00:00:38.800 I attended a computer class, but I can't practice at home without power. 00:00:39.339 --> 00:00:44.369 Only 30% of Myanmar's 51 million people had access to electricity. 00:00:45.295 --> 00:00:50.355 Even major cities see regular power cuts which have ignited frustration and protests. 00:00:50.665 --> 00:00:54.635 The government says it wants everyone to have electricity by the year 2030. 00:00:54.734 --> 00:01:03.834 If you look at many parts of urban areas, actually the rate would go as high as 75%. 00:01:04.453 --> 00:01:07.883 But, then, for the average to be 30% 00:01:07.925 --> 00:01:13.455 you need to indeed consider that in many rural areas this could be extremely low. 00:01:14.385 --> 00:01:19.368 For those in rural and ethnic minority areas power projects have long been associated 00:01:19.368 --> 00:01:22.548 with land loss and conflict, not electricity. 00:01:22.861 --> 00:01:26.341 Hydropower already provides most of the energy in Myanmar.