Tag Archives: solar lanterns

Why are people with mobile phones still using kerosene for light?

27 Feb

Kerosene Lamp in India

Reprinted, with thanks to the Fifth Estate. See the original version here.

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We’ve heard it all before. The developing world, they are so poor. They live in the dark. They have no other options.

But is this really true?

I’ve been travelling across some of the poorest countries in the  Asia-Pacific with Good Return and everywhere I go I see people with poor-quality light. People using wood fires.

And this isn’t unusual – almost 40 per cent of the world’s population rely on some form of biomass for cooking and heating and 20 per cent have no access to electricity. And yet another 15 per cent only have access to unreliable electricity networks.

But many of the people I’ve seen are also riding motor bikes, using top-quality shampoo and laundry detergent, and are talking on mobile phones.

The International Telecommunications Union stated that by the end of 2011, five billion people worldwide had mobile phones – and the coverage rate in the developing world was 79 per cent.

Which means there are people using kerosene for light and wood for fires, but mobiles for communication.

And actually, there are a significant number of people like this.

How has this happened?

I’ve read over and over that there are three main issues associated with energy poverty; three issues which standards groups, certifications schemes, Clean Development Mechanism schemes, donor funds and entire research centres have spent years working on: access to information, access to after-sales service and access to finance.

But didn’t people face these same barriers before they bought a mobile phone?

Perhaps a few answers

I know people are not happy with their kerosene light and wood fires. But when I spoke to my investment banker brother he was clear: “The benefits of the change do not outweigh the costs.”

Perhaps people do not understand the benefits – maybe because marketers keep focusing on payback. (And tell me, what exactly is the payback on expensive shampoo?)

Perhaps the quality of products is the issue, as found in this highly sceptical GTZ report of solar lanterns

Or maybe a person’s life just doesn’t change enough when they make the switch to good quality light or smokeless stoves –  and so people are just making do until they are reached by more reliable, cheaper sources of modern energy.

A year of sustainable energy for all

This year is the UN’s International Year of Sustainable Energy for All

Over the next year I plan to contribute articles to The Fifth Estate about some of the answers the best companies and organisations have found – from energy companies, to microfinance institutions, to investors, to local entrepreneurs.

May it truly be a year of sustainable energy for all.

<3 of the week: A guest post

23 Feb

Kids from the quarry in India

More from the project I have been working on in India:

It is midnight in Bangalore but out in the quarries a few huts now have light.

We picked up the solar systems and headed out to the quarry at about 4:30 today. It was chaotic! One of the key problems was that we only had managed to get one screw driver, lacking a translator did not help much either. Both of the quarry workers who had been trained on the systems on Monday left to go back to Tamil Nadu. There were three of us, one screw driver and 10 solar kits to be assembled.

We had made some progress towards working out which kit belonged to who when there was an explosion nearby. It was blasting time at the quarries! Over the next 5 minutes there was a migration to the shop, which is covered by a metal roof, to provide some shelter for us and the kits. Putting together the kits with only one screwdriver takes time and curious kids do not speed up the process but the solar panels were cradled like a small child. The sun was setting but for once this was not a problem as we had light!

With the sun set and the lights set up we went for a bit of a wander through the huts to see what was going on. It was about dinner time and Aimee and Rachel found a family with some light. The mother was breast feeding with the radio blaring. We were then dragged around by some kids who took us to every place that had light then being invited in to admire. They were so excited!

We sold another five systems tonight and it was a bit tough to collect names in the dark. We were sorting out orders in a hut basically because it had light. It is a bit hard to describe but the best place to do this was in a small thatch leave hut because we could all see what we were doing.

Electricity seems like such a small thing until it has been given to someone. Before we left some of the women were talking about televisions and bug zappers (very had to communicate through mime).

Rachel described tonight as magical. With a few huts glowing it really was.

We never know the seeds we plant (or, lighting up a corner of India)

5 Feb

Kerosene lamp in the quarry community

I have been thinking about this quote from Lederach’s “The Poetic Unfolding of the Human Spirit”.

After three decades of work I had noticed that the most interesting peacebuilding emerged spontaneously, and seemed to have little to do with all our peacebuilding work. Was this work worth it?

He then talks about a short meeting he had with a group of Colombians, where thoughts were scribbled out on paper napkins. He finds out 20 years later that these napkins planted the seeds of a significant non-violent peacebuilding campaign.

I can hardly compare my work to peacebuilding, but I can relate to the spontaneity of progress.

For the last year I have been feeling around in the dark.

My current life is best described as a series of conversations, and my deliverables amount to “make something happen”. It feels like a long way from the technical-heavy, deliverable-driven world of corporate engineering I left behind.

I’m making it up as I go, and I have no idea whether what I am doing will end up being useful or not.

Occasionally however, a light clearly shines through.

An example of the solar lighting kit

I’ve been working on a project with my cousin’s charity – the 40k Foundation – over the last few months. The illegal quarry community which he built a school for has no access to electricity. I went to India in October to take a look and see whether solar would be suitable.

This week the ever-brilliant Jamie and 40k team went back and really did make something happen – organising sales, loans and training.

A conversation scribbled out over paper napkins, so to speak, ended in a place I would never have imagined.

We never know the outcomes of our actions.

We never know the seeds we plant.

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* For those interested in the tech-y details – how the loans will work, hours of operation, wattages of the lights we picked etc etc and more etc – email me for the low down

** None of this would have happened without the rest of the 40k team – special thanks to the ever-resourceful Rachel, as well as Grif and Clary.

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