Daily Nation Newspaper

The rise of the solar economy –

Introducin­g the firms lighting up Africa

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MORE than 600 million people in sub-Saharan Africa have no access to power. Energise Africa is enabling individual investors to back companies helping to solve this energy crisis.

Ronald Barasa Wakwabubi is a 47-year-old teacher living on the rural outskirts of Eldoret, a city in western Kenya. Despite being close to the city, he, his wife, and five children have had to light their home with expensive, and often dangerous, kerosene lamps, because the electricit­y grid does not reach their home.

Smoke and fumes from the lamps have been causing the family numerous health issues, and the children complain of chest pains and itchy eyes. They have also struggled with their homework because, even with the lamps, visibility is poor when the sun sets. When mum and dad wanted to charge their mobile phones – which are a necessity where no landlines exist – they would have to travel to a local shop.

However, things have since they had their first home solar system installed.

Sollatek is one of the pioneering firms working to bring power to hundreds of millions in sub-Saharan Africa, and, earlier this year, Wakwabubi and his family became one of its burgeoning number of customers.

“Before buying solar, life was difficult and not as comfortabl­e,” says Wakwabubi. “The children could not finish their homework on time, as visibility at night was a nightmare and lighting was expensive.”

Since buying the Sollatek solar home system, the family has been able to save some of the money they used to buy kerosene. They also charge phones for their neighbours, which brings some extra cash into the household. These savings have enabled the family to pay for further tuition for the children, as well as paying monthly for the Sollatek system.

About one billion people across the globe do not have access to electricit­y. According to Power for All, a global coalition of 200 private and public organisati­ons campaignin­g to deliver universal energy access before 2030, two-thirds of these people reside in sub-Saharan Africa.

Saleem Abdulla is the managing director of Sollatek Electronic­s, a Kenyan firm that began providing voltage protection equipment in Africa in the mid-80s, before expanding into the solar market in the mid-90s.

The group now sells its solar products into small businesses and homes in seven nations across eastern Africa, and works with local partners to provide credit for people like Wakwabubi, who is paying for his family’s system over 24 months.

One of the main issues preventing solar technology from getting in more homes in this vast region has been the financing of the systems themselves.

“We need to buy the systems in bulk, and that’s expensive,” says Abdulla.

“But raising the funds for this kind of investment is almost impossible in the countries we operate in. Banks want you to have assets to cover 150% of any loan, and the interest rates are high, around 14%, plus they only want to give loans on very low-risk projects.

” But, like many other solar companies operating in the region, Sollatek has found a solution.

A UK investment initiative called Energise Africa helps connect investors, big and small, with those companies installing these life-changing solar systems in the region.

Helping out families like Wakwabubi’s doesn’t just give investors a warm fuzzy feeling inside; the potential returns aren’t bad either, coming in at between 4% and 7% a year.

Energise Africa is backed by online impact investment platforms Ethex and Lendahand, which between them have attracted more than 14,000 investors and raised a combined £80m for social enterprise­s, charities and businesses since 2013.

Sollatek is about to return to the platform in its latest fundraisin­g; it is seeking £135,000, which will ensure it can add to the 4 million people it has brought power to in the past seven years.

Another group to have benefited from the Energise Africa investment platform is London-based BBOXX, which designs, manufactur­es, distribute­s and finances “plug and play” solar systems to improve access to energy across Africa and the developing world. Advertisem­ent Mansoor Hamayun, the chief executive and co-founder of BBOXX, says mobile payments have helped boost sales of solar solutions in the sub-Saharan region, and ensured finance terms for the equipment are easy to manage for both the customer and the supplier.

Electric dreams: the solar enterprise that’s transformi­ng ethical investing

“Paying via the mobile phone has really taken off in Africa,” says Hamayun.

“What’s more, a simple solar kit is actually cheaper than the alternativ­es.

“The sad truth is people are already spending enormous amounts of money on fossil fuels like kerosene – up to $25 (£19) a month. Our entry-level solar system with three light bulbs and a phone charger is just $6 a month.”

To date BBOXX, which launched in 2010, has installed 160,000 kits and Hamayun believes investing in expanding installati­ons still further has a mass-market appeal, as well as helping to solve a humanitari­an crisis. Caroline Frontigny, co-founder of upOwa, shares Hamayun’s view. Her group distribute­s solar kits in off-grid areas in Cameroon and has just launched its latest fundraisin­g round through Energise Africa. One of the main challenges is to provide the credit service to our clients,” says Frontigny.

About one billion people across the globe do not have access to electricit­y. According to Power for All, a global coalition of 200 private and public organisati­ons campaignin­g to deliver universal energy access before 2030. changed for the Wakwabubi family. Life is very different

 ?? Photograph: Energise Africa ?? As more households in Africa switch to solar power, providers have started seeking investors from the UK.
Photograph: Energise Africa As more households in Africa switch to solar power, providers have started seeking investors from the UK.

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