Diesel Dependency in Pacific Islands Threatens Food Supplies and Healthcare Access
World Vision warns boat transport costs are preventing remote communities from receiving essential supplies and medical treatment
L'essentiel
- World Vision officials report that Pacific Island communities dependent on boat transport are facing challenges bringing food supplies to outlying centres, with transport to clinics becoming financially unreachable for some.
- People are skipping medical appointments and missing life-saving HIV and tuberculosis medicines.
- Data shows Pacific Island nations are the most diesel-dependent for power generation worldwide, with diesel fuelling more than half of electricity output in 2022.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
Pacific Island nations are the most diesel-dependent for power generation worldwide, with diesel fuelling more than half of electricity output in 2022 except for Fiji. This energy dependency creates economic challenges that ripple into transportation costs for remote communities.
“Many of our communities, because they rely on boat transport for movement are … having challenges bringing food supplies to outlying centres,” said Godfrey Bongomin, programme operations director for World Vision in Papua New Guinea. With transport to clinics now out of reach financially for some, people were skipping medical appointments and missing life-saving HIV and tuberculosis medicines, he said. “It is affecting their livelihoods.” Pacific Island nations are the most reliant on diesel for power generation worldwide, the International Finance Corp said in 2024. Data from Zero Carbon Analytics showed it fuelled more than half of electricity output in 2022, except for Fiji.
Questions ouvertes
- What specific solutions are being proposed to address the diesel dependency?
- How are governments responding to the healthcare access crisis?
- What is the timeline for potential interventions?



