Cape Argus

Solar power kit for the poor

Ecoboxx is helping SA’s unemployed gain access to economic opportunit­ies

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AMOTORBIKE accident two years ago in the Cape Town suburb of Milnerton left Pascal Kassongo with a leg fracture, multiple cuts and a writtenoff bike, crippling his courier business. Two weeks in hospital, followed by several more of physiother­apy and recovery, drove the father of four into near destitutio­n.

Too weak to buy and deliver goods to clients, his opportunit­y to earn R300 to R400 a day was gone.

Originally from Uvira in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, Kassongo fled the war there in 2007, and had only a few friends he could call on for help in South Africa. One of them was a pastor who took him to Scalabrini, a centre that helps migrants settle and find an economic foothold in South Africa.

As well as receiving regular food parcels, Kassongo was recruited for the Amandla! Project, whose name means “power” in the Xhosa and Zulu languages.

The scheme trains unemployed people, especially migrants, to run small businesses using a solar-powered kit called Ecoboxx.

The Ecoboxx is a lightweigh­t, portable power supply, charged with two solar panels, that can provide 50 hours of power. It comes with two LED lights, a USB-driven fan, hair clippers and a charging cable for cell phones and other devices.

The kit was designed for the Amandla! Project, with the intention of giving entreprene­urs a tool to power their activities, said Merle Mills of Community Chest, the organisati­on that came up with the project.

Using the kit, an individual can make up to R1 600 per month cutting hair five days a week, or at least R1 400 rand by charging up to seven cell phones at once with the device, Mills added.

Community Chest CEO Lorenzo Davids said a Dutch investor had backed the Ecoboxx as a way of helping Africans access economic opportunit­ies.

“Getting into green or solar technology is the ideal platform to ensure we give our people low-cost and sustainabl­e resources so they can develop the economy for themselves,” Davids said.

Community Chest started Amandla! in January after getting funding of almost R2 million, on condition that the kit would be made available at a nominal cost of R200 to keep people out of debt.

Davids said the Ecoboxx would help entreprene­urs in townships and rural areas “electrify” their homes, and set up businesses to generate income for their families and communitie­s.

At first, it was targeted at individual­s who find it hard to break into the mainstream economy, like African migrants and communitie­s where small businesses lack access to electricit­y.

The solar device, which retails for R4 000, is manufactur­ed by a technology company that also supplies to retail stores in South Africa.

So far, Amandla! has distribute­d 300 kits – almost a third of the planned total – including 50 to foreign nationals.

“After spending a month in Pollsmoor prison for selling pirated DVDs and CDs, I was determined to sustain myself through legal means,” said Papy Shereza, 31, a biochemist­ry dropout from a Congolese university. After enrolling in the Amandla! programme, he was given an Ecoboxx, which he uses to run his own barbershop in the community of Dunoon.

“On weekends I make good money, but during the week I have to supplement my income,” he said.

He also charges cellphones, and in a good week, he can earn R1 000.

In Gugulethu, Janet Bete, who came to South Africa from Zimbabwe in 2007, is equally happy. Her son, 24, uses an Ecoboxx to power a family barber shop.

“In my neighbourh­ood there is a man who runs a spaza (tuck shop) but has no electricit­y, so I hire out the solar lights to him daily from 5am when he opens, to 7am when it’s no longer dark,” said Bete.

The enterprisi­ng woman, who also manages a crèche, rents out the solar lights for evening church crusades and parties too.

“Whenever there is a funeral in my community and there is no power, I donate my lights – it’s my way of paying (people) back for living well together,” she added.

In Milnerton, Kassongo has adopted a different approach. “I don’t own a barbershop, but I hire out my kit to locals who do. We share the proceeds.”

Joe Pereira, the head of strategy for Community Chest, said the Amandla! project aimed to expand its opportunit­ies to all “deserving” South Africans.

“Being creative around renewable energy will benefit many people,” he added. – Thomson Reuters Foundation

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