#IWD2023:

Off-grid solar, a technology catalysing opportunity for women

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Eva Roig
Senior Communications Manager
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Published on 7 March 2023

Off-grid solar has been established as a key component of integrated energy planning in many low-income countries, enabling a clean and just energy transition that is inclusive to all.

Stand-alone solutions and pay-as-you-go systems bring opportunity to rural populations at the bottom of the pyramid. Entire households benefit from access to transformative energy, and women frequently carry the heavier load of household work, child-rearing, cooking and farming.

Image: Lighting Global, Bright

Energy access catalyses opportunities for women

Additional hours of light are life-changing for millions of households, like 57-year old Amelia Auma’s, who uses her Bboxx solar home system to light her house and help her school-going children study. Thanks to the extra hours of lighting,  she has increased the sales and revenue of her catering business: “As a businesswoman, I need a full-time light assurance… my customers need to feel comfortable and see what they eat.”

Image: Habiba Ali

As Habiba Ali, the Managing Director and CEO of Nigerian Sosai Renewable Energies Company, says: 

Energy can solve a lot of problems. Thanks to a refrigerator, a woman that has nothing can own a business, make a living, earn money and provide an education for her kids.”

This is the case for Grace Anzanzi Mwembe, who has been able to afford to set up a fish-selling business through SureChill‘s Cooling as a Service.

Image: SureChill

A single portable solar lamp can enable children to do their homework and study. They, especially girls, can also feel safer on their way to and from school like Busara, a student from Tanzania who has a Little Sun lamp:

“I have to walk long distances on foot to get to school and it’s always in the dark. My solar light brings me peace of mind, to me and to my little brother, too.”
Image: Little Sun, Denyse K. Uwera

In rural communities, where the main source of income is farming, solar-powered systems like SunCulture’s affordable smart solar-powered water pumps are life-changing.  Josephine Waweru is a 52-year old farmer in Kirinyaga county, Kenya: I used to hire petrol pumps to pump water from the river. Now I can pump from my own borehole and things are easier, I am saving time and it’s improved my coffee very well. I think it’s the best thing that’s happened since I started farming.

Image: SunCulture

Technologies like Agsol’s productive use solar agro-processing mills mechanise tasks that women frequently spend many hours doing in traditional contexts and save them money in the process. They are an innovative solution adapted to small-scale and day-to-day needs prevalent in low-income economies: “When it comes to milling the most important staple foods, current diesel or even electric milling technologies are totally at odds with this economy. Our mill is small, powerful, clean, and incredibly easy to use. The processing itself is a bit slower than bigger mills but because it’s so efficient, an owner makes double the profit per volume milled.”

Image: Agsol

Equipping small rural clinics with solar home systems like SolarWorks! is doing in Mozambique and Malawi enables 24/7 healthcare. As one of the midwives at Salone Health Clinic explains: “The first birth in that facility after electrification was 100% successful and I worked without holding a torch in my mouth while helping mothers. It was possible to stitch the parturient during the postpartum period. Before that, during most night deliveries it wasn’t possible to do decent stitching, forcing the mothers to wait until the next day with hemorrhages.

Image: SolarWorks!

How can the off-grid solar sector maximize gender equity and its impact?

Women greatly benefit from off-grid solar products and they are essential to achieve universal energy access goals, so GOGLA and the World Bank Group (with support from the Energy Sector Management Assistance Program -ESMAP) published last year a survey looking at Gender Equity in the Off-Grid Solar Energy Sector.

Female leadership is fundamental and on the rise, although it’s still under 40% and fundraising barriers persist, as Marianne Walpert, Co-CEO and Co-Founder of Simusolar, told us: 

“Women founders are not getting the same access to finance as men. I would ask investors to look at their portfolio and answer the question: how many women-led companies are they funding?“

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