49,000 homes get electricity from SolarNigeria in three months
A programme funded by the United Kingdom’s Department for
International Development has provided solar energy to 49,000 homes
across the country, SolarNigeria, has said.
The group in a statement yesterday in Abuja said the homes acquired
solar lighting and power systems in the first three months this year
with help from SolarNigeria.
The initiative is an innovative programme that helps solar suppliers
and financiers scale up and allow households to access this equipment
on full commercial terms.
To further get to more homes, SolarNigeria said the UKAID has approved
additional £16.7 million for the programme to help scale the market for
solar home lighting and power in Nigeria through to 2020, enabling
millions of Nigerian households to experience reliable power for the
very first time.
According to Genevieve Bosah, Communication Manager, SolarNigeria,
“these homes now enjoy bright light and reliable power at lower cost
than kerosene and generators. More than 14,000 of the homes benefitting
are in Nigeria’s northern states, where grid deficiencies
and the need for reliable power are the most acute. All systems were
accessed on full commercial terms, with the householder paying cash,
taking a loan, or renting the equipment”.
She explained that the “boost represents a dramatic increase in
Nigeria’s household solar market. In 2015, the estimated total market
was around 130,000 units. Between January and March 2016, new homes
connected as a result of the SolarNigeria initiative have already
matched over 40 percent of that total.
“This was achieved despite the significant challenges of limited
access to foreign exchange for importing solar, and the overall
declining economic conditions in the country. These high quality
plug-and-play solar systems include everything from single bright lamps
through to Solar Home Systems able to power multiple lights, a
television and fan”, she added.
The solar systems were provided to Nigerian households by companies
supported by the SolarNigeria Programme. The aim of the SolarNigeria
Programme is to scale up the private market for small solar lighting and
power systems, Bosah stated.
Funded by UKAID, SolarNigeria will help millions of Nigerian
households (and micro-enterprises) to access modern, clean, lighting
and power at lower cost than kerosene lanterns and small generators.
She said SolarNigeria is helping capable solar vendors and financiers
to rapidly expand their capacity to reach consumers with financed solar
solutions. Pilot programmes in 2015 provided capacity building grants
of £1.5 million to 16 companies.
In 2016 a financing pilot will provide £0.5 million in grants to
mobilise the provision of commercial finance into the value chain for
household scale solar light and power systems, she explained further.
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