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Solar Philanthropy: Five Groups Using Solar to End Energy Poverty

Ysabel Yates, Contributor
July 31, 2012  |  13 Comments

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Approximately 1.3 billion people live without regular access to energy. People are forced to use fuels that pollute and cause respiratory illnesses, like kerosene and biomass, and spend long hours time collecting fuel. It is a global crisis that is harming the health and well-being of people in the developing world, in addition to harming the planet.

Ending energy poverty is about more than helping people see at night — it’s about economic opportunity, safer and healthier communities, better educational opportunities and connection to the rest of the world.

A number of organizations are working to bring solar-powered energy solutions to the developing world. Solar power is the best alternative because it doesn’t require any prior infrastructure or use of existing resources. It’s safe for nighttime light, and can generate power for other uses, such as charging cell phones or powering medical equipment.

Below is a look at a handful of the many organizations working to end energy poverty using solar power.

1 Liter of Light

Isang Litrong Liwanag, or 1 Liter of Light, uses the Solar Bottle Light design – a cheap, sustainable, light bulb alternative – to light buildings during the day around the world.

The Solar Bottle Light requires a one-liter plastic bottle, bleach, and a bottle-shaped hole in the roof. The plastic bottle is filled with a mixture of water, and bleach. It’s then capped, sealed, and placed in the hole halfway below and halfway above the roof. The water inside the bottle refracts and disperses sunlight, giving the bottle the power of a 50-60 watt light bulb. 

The design was pioneered by Alfredo Moser, a mechanic in Sao Paulo, who needed to light his workshop when his neighborhood suffered a long cut in electricity in 2002. Since then, students from MIT have worked with 1 Liter of Light to help develop the design further.

Solar Electric Light Fund (SELF)

SELF, a DC-based non-profit, grew out of an organization that sought to illuminate rural India in the 1990s. Since then, the company has installed solar electric systems in places including Benin, Lesotho, Burundi, Kenya and, most notably, Haiti, where the organization created systems that power 11 health care facilities and a hospital run by the NGO Partners In Health. Through this installation, the organization has improved the quality of medical services for over 170,000 Haitians by powering lights, microscopes, vaccine refrigerators and other lifesaving equipment with renewable energy.

Solar Sister

Solar Sister is a social enterprise committed to eradicating energy poverty by encouraging economic development. Solar Sister gives women entrepreneurs the opportunity to grow a sustainable business selling solar products. The organization reinvests any profits back into their network of entrepreneurs, creating a sustainable business with a positive impact on the environment and the community.

We Care Solar

WE CARE Solar is a non-profit organization that manufactures the Solar Suitcase, a portable solar system, for health clinics. The Solar Suitcase is easy to use and is designed to be used at night when emergency health care is needed. The suitcase comes with highly efficient medical lighting, as well as power for mobile communication, computers, and medical devices. To date, the design has been used in almost 200 clinics in 17 countries, including Haiti, Mexico, Nicaragua, and South Sudan.

Project Surya

To replace the highly polluting cooking stoves traditionally used in rural areas, Project Surya invented a stove that requires less than half as much biomass fuel, and emits less greenhouse gases. The improved stove has a solar lamp and a solar-panel powered fan to improve combustion. The project will help divert black carbon, methane, and ozone from the environment. In addition, because exposure to traditional biomass fuel can cause upper respiratory complications, low birth weight, eye diseases, and even blindness, replacing the stoves with clean technology is expected to improve public health.

This article was originally published on ecomagination and was republished with permission.

Lead image: A Solar Bottle Light, courtesy 1 Liter of Light.

13 Comments

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Ralph Perez
Ralph Perez
August 8, 2012
It is also nice to see small communities and agencies across the US purchasing solar PV rooftops for the low income, disabled and senior populations. The free energy from the sun helps each group build a higher quality of life for themselves and their children.
greg chick
greg chick
August 5, 2012
DCAir, So true, if/when Solar can be used for War will be a big day for Solar!... It is said a big dish was used to burn another ship in Viking days! I am suggesting power drives almost everything. Lets fix people then fix power source.....or make more laws, or jails, or Schools, or what? Fix the family... work on the youth, hope for a better leadership as result... not all are leaders, most are followers, so lets identify who they are and focus on them to be better stewards and leaders. With out social leadership we will not make it even with the sun...
David Coles
David Coles
August 5, 2012
DCAirSolar Systems is dedicated to supplying Solar Systems which will save as much as 70% in energy costs. Our latest is a HVAC System partially powered by the Sun's Rays. Other projects are under way including Solar Powered Automobiles, Trains, Ships and yes even Airplanes and Military Combat Tanks and other fighting vehicles. Visit us at: www.dcasystems.com and take note of our latest venture at: http://wp.me/p2n9x2-9
Atanacio Luna
Atanacio Luna
August 4, 2012
Coal-War, I say something like this to deniers as well: Angree disrespectful arguments are usually invalid. Passion displaces reason and discredits its cause. I can't really tell what your point is, much less be convinced. As to what I think you are saying, Biomass may not be much better than coal, it requires water and land which displaces food production and natural bioms.
The right solutions are probably closer to micro-DG/hybrids (as per this article,)PV and Wind. Although, from our perspective, these are impotnent to resolve the world-wide desire to surpass Western wealth generating achievements per Fossile Fuels. Nuclear, even Thoruim based is only a false stepingstone because of its potential for damage.
There are solutions but we need to discuss sincerely, dispasionately, and respectfully. Thanks for allowing my criticism.
Klaus Dohring
Klaus Dohring
August 4, 2012
Excellent report.
we have a solar kiosk solution, off-grid, with LED lightign and refridgeration, driven by a solar system. Nicely packaged, take a look at www.RET-Center.com
SCOTT ALF
SCOTT ALF
August 4, 2012
Electricity is an intermediary between source and use.
Yotam Ariel
Yotam Ariel
August 4, 2012
Actually more and more organizations and businesses are taking action to bring solar to low-income villagers in developing countries.

But to reach over a billion (very nice) villagers,
we need to make it easy to start and run solar operations
in these regions.

And that is where free information becomes important.

I compiled information on active businesses/organizations:
(including those mentioned in the article)
- http://www.bennu-solar.com/organizations
- http://www.bennu-solar.com/index.php/resources/africa
- http://www.bennu-solar.com/index.php/resources/developing-asia
- http://www.bennu-solar.com/index.php/resources/latin-america

available finance:
- http://www.bennu-solar.com/finance

products:
http://www.bennu-solar.com/solutions

information on import tax and tariffs on solar in developing countries:
http://tinyurl.com/solar-taxes

Hope this helps,
though, I also provide free consulting
which I hope assist even more:
http://tinyurl.com/free-consulting

Looking forward to share insights,
and work together to end energy poverty.

Thank you,
Yotam
(y.ariel@bennu-solar.com)
Leendert van Doorn
Leendert van Doorn
August 3, 2012
What would be the best: philantrophy or business? Or a mix of both? With the deminishing prices for solar and storage the business model will grow probably.
You could take a look at www.fres.nl (foundation for rural energy services), that was founded by the Dutch energy company Nuon some years ago, which operates a commercial fee-for-service concept in several African countries.
Christopher Lee
Christopher Lee
August 1, 2012
How about solar heating, and greenhouses, to make people comfortable in those numerous strife-ridden regions at high altitude that have strong year-round insolation?
ANONYMOUS
August 1, 2012
I would like to add to this list an interesting organization called SODIS. This organization is promoting solar water disinfection using empty plastic beverage bottles and sunlight (it works).
see www.sodis.ch

low tech sometimes is best.
Coyote.
Erik Hoffner
Erik Hoffner
August 1, 2012
One group that is doing great work in this realm that rarely gets mentioned is Green Empowerment, which works with communities in Central/South America and Asia, mostly indigenous ones, and only at their invitation. Too many solar groups 'drop out of the sky' to install an energy asset they deem best or that they mainly deal with and then disappear. When that system breaks, it becomes scrap.

GE helps them decide if wind, solar, or microhydro is best in their locale, then trains them in design and installation and financing, then via a local NGO, stays in contact to answer questions or source parts they need to fix their system when it fails (and the communities have to pay for those later maintenance needs, so it's often a first introduction to personal/community finance).

Overall, it's green empowerment, from the social side and from the clean energy side. More here: http://greenempowerment.org/
Coal War
Coal War
August 1, 2012
Biomass does not cause respiratory illness, though the inappropriate use of biomass can cause terrible damage. Some inappropriate uses of biomass, such as Eon's move to mitigate 1% of its carbon requirement by incinerating 300,000 annual tons of wood in co-fired coal boilers, some inappropriate uses are criminal in their negligence. What we don't have a choice about is the one fuel that dominates the energy market through a media campaign of misinformation called the 'War on Coal', bastardized and co-opted by the GOP, and hung around the neck of President Obama and the EPA. Every renewable energy kilowatt that permanently eliminates a coal kilowatt is a win with relative social value and local economic impact. What we don't have a choice about is the conflict created by volatile fluctuations in energy prices and the finance games played by the rich. The cannibalization of public perception of other renewables by Solar advocates supports efforts by the coal industry to derail other efforts for the common good by inserting common misconceptions into common language. Coal Kills. Coal manipulates economies of scale by creating artificial resource scarcity. Biomass is clean renewable technology, the giant sleeper, the giant about to awaken and swallow the coal industry with the local version of baseload generation. Distributed biomass will replace coal generation and is the only appropriate technology in the world capable of producing oxygen in excess of its carbon reduction. Biomass is about local economies, hands on stewardship, and growing billions of trees intentionally as a commitment to heal a terrible imbalance. It's about a commitment to end coal use and the daily rape of our Appalachian heritage. Don't be a tool for the Friends of coal by projecting misinformation about complimentary technologies into public perception like some haphazard scud. It's just as likely to fall on an ally as an enemy.
ANONYMOUS
August 1, 2012
Individual companies need to step up in this arena as well. Schneider Electric has a program called BIP BOP that stands for Business Innovation People - Base of the Pyramid. The goal is to help bring electricity to the 1.4B people in the BOP. It is a combination of bringing investment, innovative solutions like LED Solar lighting kits and training to give a hand up. Check out the details:
http://www2.schneider-electric.com/sites/corporate/en/group/sustainable-development-and-foundation/social-commitments/communities.page

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