
Solar Panels Light Up Remote Villages
Oct. 27, 2011 - Koffigan E. Adigbli - ipsnews.net
DAKAR , Oct 27, 2011 (IPS) - Frequent power cuts
have led people in rural areas of Burkina Faso, Mali
and Senegal to turn to solar energy for electricity.
Promoters of solar panels say more than 80 villages
in Senegal are already benefiting from this renewable
energy source; in neighbouring Mali, more than 150
communities are enjoying solar power.
According to solar manufacturer Sustainable Power
Electric Company (SPEC), based in Senegal, photovoltaic
cells, or solar panels, have been a potential solution
for electrification in rural areas for years, with
only the relatively high cost of installation preventing
widespread adoption in West Africa.
But Mamadou Saliou Sow, director of SPEC, explains
that a generous subsidy is now bringing the panels
within reach of many more in Senegal.
"A square metre of photovoltaic cells previously
cost 650,000 CFA francs (around 1,350 dollars), but
with a subsidy from the government of more than four
billion CFA (around 8.3 million dollars), we have
reduced this. Now one can get panels and the hardware
needed to install them for 300,000, even 250,000
CFA (520 dollars)," Sow told IPS.
"And solar panels also have a long life span
after installation; they can last eight or ten years
or more."
SPEC manufactures panels with outputs ranging from
50 watts to more than 300W, meaning they can meet
nearly all needs. As well as providing lighting in
homes and schools, solar panels are powering fridges,
improving security, and supporting small collective
enterprises and mini-power plants.
In the village of Kidira, in eastern Senegal, not
far from the border with Mali, livestock owners were
experiencing worrying levels of theft. Amadou Dia,
a teacher at the local secondary school, says the
villagers turned to solar power to light up their
stock enclosures at night.
"People here are mostly livestock herders,
but there was a series of stock thefts. They dipped
into their own pockets, contributing 50,000 CFA per
household (a little more than 100 dollars), to get
solar lighting," he told IPS.
Shakir Sow lives in the area, but he opted to go
it alone. He spent more than a million CFA (2000
dollars) to install solar panels at his house, but
he is not complaining at the cost.
"With the installation of a photovoltaic kit,
my animals are protected; and my children who are
in school can also study thanks to the light. And
now we have a television to follow the news. I'm
a modern herdsman," he said.
SPEC also operates in neighbouring Mali, alongside
another provider, Sahel Energie. In Dindiéri,
in the east of the country, nearly all the houses
enjoy solar energy.
"I spent 680,000 CFA (1,417 dollars) to get
my solar panels. This provides power for the whole
house and a bar, as well as two televisions, lamps
and two fridges," said Moutakilou Bangoura,
a young trader from Dindiéri.
In Kayes, a city in the west of Mali, some families
have opted for solar power even though the city is
connected to the national electricity grid. They
say solar energy is cheaper - and it extends the
life of their electrical appliances.
Khalidou Soumaré, an official with the Kayes
municipalitiy, told IPS that he has used solar panels
in his house for 10 years.
"Back then, people thought that it was a luxury;
I was simply fed up with the power cuts, which were
also damaging my appliances. I chose solar and I
don't regret it. I no longer have a monthly bill
to pay," said Soumaré.
"What's still a problem is getting spare parts
for the device which stores solar power (in a battery).
We used to buy them in Bamako (the Malian capital);
now you can get them here, although sometimes the
traders try to outdo each other."
According to Soumaré, there are also non-governmental
organisations working to improve access to electricity
in rural areas. For example, in 2009 the Monaco Red
Cross installed a mini-solar power plant consisting
of twelve 50-watt panels in Kayes, to support the
recharging of 400 individual lamps owned by families.
"Each user receives a lamp, and can recharge
it at the central point whenever they want for a
monthly subscription fee of 700 CFA (1.45 dollars).
The revenue from this pays for a technician and for
any maintenance," Soumaré said.
"This approach has the advantage of making
solar electricity immediately available to families
who don't have the resources to buy a photovoltaic
kit."
In Boulsa, a village in the Koupèla commune
in southern Burkina Faso, a French NGO called Soleil
et Développement (Sun and Development) helped
102 women install solar panels in their houses in
2009. The women have put the electricity to good
use, forming a collecting which processes grain for
sale.
"Solar energy can contribute effectively to
the reduction of household energy bills," says
SPEC director Sow. He believes the world's energy
future is inconceivable without renewable energy,
and solar power in particular.
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