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Northern Tanzania project selected to compete in the world’s leading
green energy awards
Prizes presented by Al Gore
By Staff
Reporter
The
world’s leading green energy prize, the Ashden Awards for Sustainable
Energy has selected ten renewable energy pioneers from across the globe
to enter the final stage of the competition which takes place in London
on June 21
Zara Solar Ltd. From northern Tanzania will compete with contenders
from Bangladesh, China, Ghana, India, Lao PDR, Nepal, Peru and
Philippines for five awards and more than £200,000 of prize money
earmarked to help project expansion and replication in other communities
both locally and nationwide. The finalists will be in London next month
for the last stage of the judging process.
The
former US Vice President Mr Al Gore,
who will present the prizes at the Ashden Awards ceremony held at
the Royal Geographical Society in London, on June 21, commented: “The
Ashden Awards are a powerful reminder that well designed and managed
local sustainable energy initiatives can tackle climate change while
meeting the needs of local communities. Tackling these issues
simultaneously - in both rich and poor countries - is critical to
addressing the twin planetary challenges of climate change and
sustainable development.”
Zara
Solar Ltd,
the leading provider of solar PV in Northern Tanzania, has been selected
for providing high quality, reliable solar-home-systems at affordable
prices to communities lacking access to a reliable source of energy.
Given that only 10% of the whole population and 2% of the rural
population have access to the electricity grid in Tanzania, solar energy
would seem to be an obvious alternative.
However, the up front costs and the
problems with providing technical support to more remote areas, limits
its appeal. Zara Solar has tackled this problem by selling high-quality,
reliable systems at affordable prices and by creating a network of
trained technicians that provide technical support to the more remote
rural areas. Zara Solar and its sister company Mona-Mwanza Electrical &
Electronics, have sold over 3,600 solar PV systems, directly benefiting
over 18,000 people and this figure is expected to increase significantly
over the coming year.
Sarah Butler-Sloss, founder and chair of the Ashden Awards
said: “All the finalists were selected because they stand out as
inspiring examples of how providing local sustainable energy solutions
to reduce global carbon emissions can also reap tremendous social and
economic rewards for local communities around the world. They deserve to
be highlighted and used to inspire others”
Solar energy made affordable to the
rural poor
By Mohamedrafik Parpia

A man stands in front of his solar-home-system
in Northern Tanzania.
Customers show Zara staff a 'fake' PV module
purchased elsewhere, Zara Solar, Tanzania.

Solar-powered TV keeps these street children
entertained. System supplied by Zara Solar,
Tanzania.
Tanzania has one of the lowest rates of electrification in the world.
Only 10% of the population have access to the electricity grid, and in
rural areas only 2% have access, leaving people dependant on
increasingly expensive kerosene for lighting. Even in cities like Mwanza
in Northern Tanzania where there is grid supply, there is a large
backlog of applications for grid connection, and it may take many years
to get connected.
There is a huge demand for electricity that the national grid simply
cannot meet. The recent arrival of mobile phones and television networks
in the rural areas has increased this demand especially as mobile phones
are increasing business opportunities, and enabling people in rural
areas to keep in touch with family members in the towns and cities.
The increased awareness around solar energy and its benefits has meant
that people are increasingly attracted to solar PV. However, the upfront
cost is a major obstacle to many of the rural poor and there is also the
problem of many small shops and electrical businesses offering cheap
low, quality PV modules which are made to look like well known good
quality brands. These fail after a short time and give solar PV
technology a bad name.
Zara Solar Ltd, the leading provider of solar PV in Northern Tanzania,
is working hard to overcome these obstacles by helping people identify
'fake' equipment and by providing people with high quality yet
affordable solar PV systems. As one customer puts it: "I am very
pleased with the lights and radio from the one-panel system I bought
from Zara Solar, so I have come back to buy another. Before I came to
Zara I had bought a cheap panel from another dealer which did not work,
it was a waste of money."
The efforts of Zara Solar is making solar PV attractive to more and more
people. As a result sales have been rapidly accelerating. To date, Zara
Solar and its sister company Mona-Mwanza Electrical & Electronics, have
sold over 3,600 solar PV systems, directly benefiting over 18,000 people
and this figure is expected to increase significantly over the coming
year.
In order to reach more remote areas, Zara Solar uses a network of
trained local technicians that can service their own local customer base
as well as providing customers with sufficient training to maintain the
system properly once it is installed.
Because of the poor road access, the cost of kerosene for lighting is
much higher in the rural areas. For a typical family using 6-9 litre/month
this represents a monthly cost of 12,000 to 18,000 Tsh (£4.80 to £7.20),
a substantial burden in a region where the minimum employed wage is only
50,000 Tsh (£20) a month. From savings on kerosene alone, Zara Solar
customers in the rural areas could easily pay back the cost of a PV
system in less than two years if the right financing methods were
available.
The use of PV provides significant social benefits for health, welfare
and education. In health centres, improved lighting and mobile phone
charging are very useful: one centre found that more women came to give
birth after kerosene lamps were replaced by PV lighting in the delivery
room. Where solar PV is used in schools the students can benefit from
better lighting in the evening and the use of some electrical equipment.
One of the many organisations caring for street children has used
PV-powered TV as one of the ways to make life more attractive off the
streets. According to the co-ordinator of Upend Daima family home for
street children: "Having electricity for lighting and TV gives a more
enjoyable life for the children, its one of the things which encourages
them not to go back to the streets."
Several customers of Zara Solar are earning extra income from their
solar PV systems, due in part to the UNDP having provided 60% grants to
people buying the equipment to set up or support a small business. A
number of bars and cafes use their solar PV to operate lights and a TV,
attracting more customers and increasing their trade. A novel example is
a business producing small fish for use as bait, where the pump to
aerate the pond water in the hatching tanks is operated by the solar PV
system.
The main limitation on future growth is the availability of consumer
finance. Zara Solar is hoping to address this by exploring various
micro-finance packages which will give the rural poor the chance to pay
back the cost of the system over time.
If successful, Ashden Award money would be used to set up service
centres in rural areas allowing technicians to buy stock locally instead
of travelling to the towns; to pilot a micro-finance scheme and to
market solar PV systems more widely.
Mohamedrafik A. Parpia will attend the Awards ceremony in London
zarasolar@yahoo.com
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