Times of Eswatini

Business unusual, mini-grids power Eswatini rural communitie­s

- Eswatini News Reporter

MVUNDLA - Sithembile Khumalo lives with her family in a small remote rural community called Mvundla in Eswatini’s Manzini Region, some 75 kilometres from the capital city of Mbabane.

Like most unemployed women in the area, the married mother of two boys preoccupie­s herself with household chores like weeding her maize and sweet potato fields and cooking for her family.

Eswatini has a population of 1.2 million, of which 59 per cent live below the poverty line. About twothirds of the population lives in rural areas and forms the majority of poor people.

Although the country has a higher national electrific­ation rate of 85 per cent compared to 40 per cent for Africa, it imports about 70 per cent of its coal-generated power from neighbouri­ng countries, making the cost higher for citizens. In addition, 90 per cent of the rural population still uses traditiona­l energy sources, such as firewood, contributi­ng to deforestat­ion.

Women are largely responsibl­e for fetching firewood for cooking, spending a significan­t amount of time on unproducti­ve work.

In its climate action document also called the revised Nationally Determined Contributi­on to the UN Framework on Climate Change, Eswatini committed to achieving 100 per cent access to clean modern energy for cooking at household-level by 2030.

The country also committed to replacing inefficien­t wood-based water heating with energy-efficient options to reduce its share by 13 per cent by 2030. These ambitious plans are in line with sustainabl­e developmen­t goals (SDGs), especially Goal 7 – Affordable and Clean Energy – Goal 5 – Gender Equality - and Goal 13 – Climate Action.

To accelerate progress towards 2030, the government, working with developmen­t partners, is focusing on electrifyi­ng remote rural areas like Mvundla using mini-grids.

Homesteads

Until two years ago, Mvundla, with a population of about 200 and 21 homesteads, formed part of Eswatini’s rural population of over 60 per cent with no access to electricit­y.

In 2021 Eswatini Electricit­y Company, through a partnershi­p with Eswatini Regulatory Authority, installed the Sigcineni 35KW Solar PV Plant which supplies power to Mvundla. Before then, Khumalo would cross a river using a makeshift bridge and travel for more than a kilometre to charge her cellphone or place her perishable food in the fridge at homesteads in the nearby community.

“Having access to electricit­y has significan­tly reduced the amount of time I spend on doing household chores,” said Khumalo, adding: “I use electricit­y for refrigerat­ion, cooking, and ironing.”

Most importantl­y, she is happy that her children aged 12 and 14 study better now under electric light.

Despite the access to electricit­y, two years later, there are still no businesses such as shops or a hammer mill in the area, resulting in KhumaIo and the rest of the community crossing the river and walking four kilometres to buy a loaf of bread or get to the hammer mill to process their maize, the country staple, to mealie meal.

She spends E40 (about US$2) to get to the hammer mill and back, an unaffordab­le amount for someone who comes from a household where no one has a stable job except for earning income from weeding other people’s fields or selling bananas from the family orchard.

Fortunatel­y, the community is already taking advantage of the mini-grid.

A male resident has constructe­d a small complex that will house a grocery store, and a salon among other outlets. Khumalo said the women were still brainstorm­ing business ideas and pondering on how they could go about setting up a hammer mill when in October 2023 an opportunit­y knocked on their door.

UNDP, in partnershi­p with the Deputy Prime Minister’s Office (DPMO), and the Ministry of Natural Resources and Energy (MNRE), organised a training

for 50 women entreprene­urs including those with disabiliti­es.

Facilitate­d by the University of Eswatini’s Centre for Sustainabl­e Energy Research, the week-long training equipped the women with skills in Business plan developmen­t, sustainabl­e living, gender dimensions of clean energy transition­s, marketing, and financial Management, among other topics.

traInIng

The training was conducted through the Powering Equality Project funded by the Republic of Korea and Luxembourg under the UNDP Gender Equality and Women’s Empowermen­t Funding Window. The two-year project, whose implementa­tion started in 2023 and ends in 2024, is a partnershi­p between DPMO, MNRE and UNDP.

It is building on UNDP’s partnershi­p with the Ministry of Natural Resources and Energy and the World Bank on the ‘Networking Reinforcem­ent and Access Project (NRAP) – Closing the Gender Gap in Eswatini

Energy Sector’ project, which has conducted a stock take on the barriers that hinder gender responsive governance in the energy sector.

This project uncovered the poor participat­ion of women in the energy sector either as entreprene­urs or profession­als. In response, the Powering Equality Project is building the capacity of rural women to take advantage of renewable energy to not only power their homes but also run small businesses to enhance their livelihood­s.

“Apart from the hammer mill which we are considerin­g to operate as an associatio­n, I’m interested in starting a broiler chicken business. Other women are inspired to establish a salon and sewing businesses,” said Khumalo.

The Powering Equality project is also building on the Africa Minigrids Project (AMP) supported through a Global Environmen­t Facility (GEF) grant of US$863 242, the equivalent of E15.5 million.

The AMP, a four-year programme which started in 2022, aims to support Mvundla and a neighbouri­ng community, Bulimeni, to create small businesses using solar power.

tools

Following the training, the women entreprene­urs will receive essential tools from the Powering Equality Project to establish their businesses.

The Department of Gender Affairs under the Deputy Prime Minister’s Office will showcase these initiative­s at an event taking place on the margins of the Commission of the Status of Women (CSW) on March 21 in New York.

In line with the Internatio­nal Women’s Day 2024 theme; Invest in women: Accelerate progress, the project powerfully showcases how, with the right support, women like Khumalo are breaking barriers beyond the household, driving community developmen­t, and propelling the nation toward achieving SDGs.

 ?? (Pic: UNDP) ?? Sithembile Khumalo has seen the benefits of the electric power, to which she has access. Now that the developmen­t have come through, she says women are still brainstorm­ing business ideas and pondering on how they could go about setting up a hammer mill, when in October 2023 an opportunit­y knocked on their door.
(Pic: UNDP) Sithembile Khumalo has seen the benefits of the electric power, to which she has access. Now that the developmen­t have come through, she says women are still brainstorm­ing business ideas and pondering on how they could go about setting up a hammer mill, when in October 2023 an opportunit­y knocked on their door.
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? UNESWA Lecturer Zothile Mabusela facilitati­ng the training that has benefitted residents of Mvundla.
UNESWA Lecturer Zothile Mabusela facilitati­ng the training that has benefitted residents of Mvundla.

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