Solar is key to meeting energy needs of all Kenyans
By People Daily, August 2, 2021
JOSEPH NJOROGE
The off-grid solar market is a key plank towards achieving the UN’s Sustainable Development Goal Seven – Universal Access to Energy for all by 2030.
In Kenya, a strategy to optimise alternative sources of energy such as the sun has been put in place to ensure Kenyans living in counties outside the better served central corridor have access to modern energy.
A number of factors favour the harnessing of solar energy. For starters, according to the World Bank’s Global Solar Atlas, Kenya ranks among the countries with the highest irradiance or solar yield in Africa.
Secondly, Kenya has a well-developed standalone solar photovoltaic systems market.
While this market started being nurtured in the mid-1980s, there was renewed momentum when Kenya was chosen, with Ghana, as one of the two pilot countries for the World Bank’s Lighting Africa project.
Fronted by the World Bank and its private sector lending wing, the International Finance Corporation (IFC), Lighting Africa was the first private-sector oriented effort to leverage new light emitting diode (LED) lighting technologies to build sustainable markets to provide modern, safe, affordable off-grid lighting to communities in Africa that lack access to grid electricity.
One of Lighting Africa’s major successes was the development of standards and testing methodology to support quality products in the market.
According to the Off-Grid Solar Market Trends Report published by the World Bank in March 2020, about 42 per cent of all solar energy solutions sold in Kenya meet the Lighting Global Standards, compared to three per cent in 2009.
Kenya’s Standalone Solar Systems (SSS) market is marked by unique, investor-fronted innovations that include efficient supply channels for the cash sale of portable lanterns and SSS for households; the deployment of Pay-As-You-Go systems through monthly installments, mostly paid through mobile money, and the mobilisation of debt and equity capital to fund business expansion.
It is this robust SSS market that the Kenya Off-grid Solar Access Project (KOSAP) seeks to deepen to provide modern energy solutions to communities in underserved and off-grid parts of Kenya. KOSAP is being implemented in 14 underserved counties.
These include Kwale, Kilifi, Taita Taveta, Tana Tiver, Garissa, Mandera, Wajir and Marsabit. Others are Turkana, West Pokot, Samburu, Narok, Lamu and Isiolo.
Tellingly, SSS and clean cooking solutions (CCS) for households are an integral component of the five-year project, supported by the World Bank to the tune of Sh15 billion, and being implemented by the Ministry of Energy, Kenya Power and Lighting Company and Rural Electrification and Renewable Energy Corporation.
The third component of the project is standalone solar systems and solar water pumps for community facilities.
The community facilities targeted include health, education and offices of local administrators.
KOSAP seeks to have 250,000 households served by stand-alone solar systems and 150,000 households served by CCS by the end of the project in 2023.
KOSAP further seeks to construct 157 mini-grids in the targeted counties that will be used to connect about 61,500 households with solar power.
Similarly, about 473 public facilities, including secondary schools, health clinics and administrative offices will be supplied with solar power under the project.
Some 380 boreholes that currently use diesel and other fuels will also benefit from the installation of solar power.
Integral to KOSAP is a unique funding model meant to incentivise Solar Service Providers (SSPs) and sellers of modern cookstoves to set up sales and after-sales infrastructure in the targeted counties.
Already Sh500 million has been disbursed to 19 Kenyan companies and they are actively selling on the ground. — The writer is the Principal Secretary, Ministry of Energy — ps@energy.go.ke