NAIROBI --
M-KOPA LLC, a mobile-technology startup, is extending credit to
low-income earners in Kenya to buy solar-power systems that are
otherwise out of their financial reach, Managing Director Jesse Moore
said.
The company, whose name means to borrow in
Swahili, has sold 1,000 units since it began offering the product
commercially in June, Moore said in a phone interview yesterday from
Nairobi, the capital. The target is to reach sales of “tens of
thousands” of units within a year, he said.
“We are giving people a modern, cleaner and
longer-lasting technology for less than what they would spend on
kerosene or another inefficient substitute,” Moore said.
About 80 percent of Kenyan households rely on kerosene
for lighting because they aren’t linked to the national electricity
grid, which doesn’t reach many rural communities and requires a
connection fee of at least 35,000 shillings ($412). Inhaling fumes from
fuels, including the coal and biomass used to power stoves and lamps in
many developing nations, has the same effects on an individual’s health
as smoking two packs of cigarettes a day, according to the World Health
Organization.
M-KOPA’s product isn’t the only pre-paid solar-power system
being geared for the poor in Kenya. Azuri Technologies Ltd., a
Cambridge, England-based company, plans to install 4,000 of its Indigo solar pay-as-you-go
units in Kenya by year-end, Chief Executive Officer Simon
Bransfield-Garth said in a phone interview yesterday. He declined to
specify the number of units the company has already sold in the country.
Free Power
The M-KOPA system, which is marketed by dealers in Nairobi and western Kenya, comprises a 4-watt rooftop solar panel, a control box that attaches to the wall of a home or business, three lamps and mobile-phone chargers.
Under the payment plan, the system costs 16,900
shillings, or about $199, in a country where the annual per-capita
income is $820. Clients make a down-payment of 2,500 shillings and then
daily installments of 40 shillings until it’s paid off.
After that, the owners get power for free. By
comparison, Kenyan families spend an average of 50 shillings a day on
kerosene to light their homes and fees to have their mobile phones
charged at places that have electricity, according to research by
M-KOPA.
George Miruka, a 36-year-old father of four, said he
stopped worrying about the fire-risk from kerosene lamps after
outfitting his mud-walled hut with an M-KOPA system last month. “My
children are safe,” Miruka said.
‘Bulk Payments’
He earns 5,000 shillings a month sterilizing an
operating theater and cleaning a local hospital in Oyugis town, 248
kilometers (154 miles) northeast of Nairobi. “The solarsystem
works when I have credit in my account, so I make bulk payments to
ensure the system always keeps going,” Miruka said by phone. “I have 264
days remaining to complete my payment.”
Payments for M-KOPA are processed by Safaricom Ltd.,
East Africa’s largest telecommunications provider, through its
mobile-phone money-transfer platform known as M-PESA, at rates of as low
as 5 shillings, Moore said.
That allows M-KOPA to tap into M-PESA’s 15.1 million
customers, comprising almost a third of Kenya’s population. An estimated
33 percent of Kenyans are “financially excluded” and don’t have savings
accounts, credit cards or access to loans, according to the Kenya
Financial Sector Deepening program in Nairobi.
‘Economic Pyramid’
“This system addresses some fundamental issues at the
bottom of the economic pyramid with 70 to 80 percent of the country
living without grid electricity,” Bob Collymore, chief executive officer
of Safaricom, said in an interview on Oct. 3. “Children can’t do
homework at night without light, and the use of kerosene also concerns
us at an environmental level. We can use our technology to address these
issues.”
M-KOPA’s director of strategy and co-founder, Nick
Hughes, is the former head of global payments at U.K.-based Vodafone
Plc, where he helped start M-PESA in 2004. Vodafone has a 40 percent
stake in Safaricom. Competitors Bharti Airtel Ltd., Telkom Kenya Ltd.
and Essar Telecom Kenya Ltd. have since started operating mobile
phone-based banking systems in the country.
The solar-power unit
is manufactured by d.light Energy Pvt Ltd., a U.S.-based
lighting-product designer. Funders of the project include Gray Ghost
Ventures in Atlanta, Georgia; Royal Dutch Shell Plc’s Shell Foundation;
and the British Department for International Development.
M-KOPA is considering offering other “pay-as-you-go”
products to markets in developing countries including irrigation
systems, refrigerators for shop-owners to cool drinks and snacks, as
well as sewing machines, Moore said.
Copyright 2012 Bloomberg
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2012/10/kenyas-m-kopa-offers-cheaper-so lar-power-to-off-grid-villages
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