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Solar Mamas bring light and hope to rural Mexico

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In a remote village on southern Mexico’s Pacific Coast, fisherman Jose Barriento, 62, relaxes on a rope hammock after dinner in a darkened room with bare cinder-block walls and a corrugated metal roof.

The only light comes from the flickering screen of a television set – a luxury that was impossible in this community until his wife, Norma Guerra, became a “Solar Mama”.

Mr Barriento and Ms Guerra are lifelong residents of Cachimbo, a tattered town of about 150 people on a barrier island in Oaxaca state with lots of palm trees, few roads and infrequent rainfall. There also wasn’t any electricit­y, so everyone used candles or kerosene lamps. Ms Guerra, 52, stopped going to school after fourth grade and spends most days helping her husband prepare and sell fish that, in a good week, can fetch 3,000 pesos (Dh587).

But in 2014, Cachimbo took a small step toward modernity.

Under a quirky programme designed to empower poor rural communitie­s around the world, Ms Guerra and three other local women went to India for six months to be trained as electrical technician­s. They returned to install dozens of solar panels, battery packs and wiring that now run lights and appliances all over the village.

“Cachimbo was difficult, ugly and always dark,” Ms Guerra says under the palm-thatched roof of her patio. “Just walking around town you risked falling. With the solar kits, a lot has changed. You can go to bed later. Kids can do their homework at night. For the women, it allows us to do our chores in the home while men continue their labours. Everything is easier now that there is illuminati­on.”

While most Mexicans have electricit­y, many of the country’s less-populated areas aren’t connected to a distributi­on grid, and extending wires to remote locations like Cachimbo can be very expensive to install and maintain. The government overhauled energy policy in 2013 to encourage private investment in the formerly state-controlled industry and is targeting stand-alone systems like wind and solar for almost 2 million people living without power. The first contracts for small-scale rural power projects were awarded by the government last year. Two more are planned this year to raise as much as 4.8 billion pesos in investment, which will bring Mexico’s electrific­ation rate to 99 per cent.

The country needs to raise as much as 12bn pesos in the wholesale electricit­y market by 2021 to get everyone connected, the Energy Ministry says. Ms Guerra didn’t know anything about solar power when Sanjit “Bunker” Roy showed up in Cachimbo in late 2013.

Mr Roy founded a centre that became known as Barefoot College in Tilonia, India, four decades ago to provide educationa­l and vocational training for the rural and uneducated poor. One of its most successful programmes is one Mr Roy dubbed the “Solar Mamas”.

They have installed solar electrical systems in 96 countries that provide power to more than 650,000 people.

Barefoot College supports its programmes by raising about $4m a year from donors, mostly from the Indian government, according to the college’s chief executive officer, Meagan Fallone. The programme is unusual because it focuses almost exclusivel­y on providing skills to women rather than men, who Mr Roy jokingly called “untrainabl­e” when he explained his philosophy in a 2011 TED Talk. “This is the only training programme in the whole world where an illiterate woman can become an engineer,” Mr Roy said in a 2013 documentar­y about Solar Mamas.

“He told us that if the men are given the opportunit­y, when they get back to town, they will leave,” Mr Guerra says. “Women have roots here, such as children, grandchild­ren. Women will come back with the ability to generate electricit­y and they will stay in the community.”

The four Solar Mamas from Cachimbo spent six months training in India. After returning home in October 2014, they installed more than 60 solar kits. She put her training to good use a few months ago when the strongest earthquake that Mexico has recorded in the last century hit the state of Oaxaca, killing almost 100 people and demolishin­g infrastruc­ture in one of it’s largest cities, Juchitan. Ms Guerra loaded her boat with solar panels and made the three-hour trip to the city, about 90km away. She went door-to-door to install equipment in homes that lost power, providing the only lighting available for many residents over several days.

“At a time when people felt so insecure and scared, they were so happy to have some form of light,” Ms Guerra says.

“It gave me so much satisfacti­on to be able to provide it.”

With the solar kits, a lot has changed. You can go to bed later. Kids can do their homework at night NORMA GUERRA ‘Solar Mama’

 ?? Bloomberg ?? ‘Solar Mama’ Norma Guerra changed the lives of residents of her home village in Mexico
Bloomberg ‘Solar Mama’ Norma Guerra changed the lives of residents of her home village in Mexico

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