6 Aralık 2013 Cuma

Christmas appeal: how solar lamps are transforming life in one Kenyan county

Christmas appeal: Milton Cheriot

Milton Cheriot, 13, at Chepnyaliliet school. He can now do his homework with constant light in the evenings. Photograph: Nichole Sobecki




Chepnyaliliet college, with its rough concrete walls and tin roof at the end of a dusty lane lined with cacti and wild roses, would seem a sleepy place to go hunting for early adopters of technological innovation. But that is precisely what Rhoda Sigei is. The established nursery teacher was the 1st man or woman in Bomet county, a verdant patch of Kenya’s Great Rift valley, to acquire into the prospective of solar lamps. When the headmaster brought some samples to the school, Sigei knew she had to have one particular so she asked for an advance on her small salary. “It was a struggle to get the initial a single, but I did not end there. I purchased three,” she says.


She quickly realised the £5 orange plastic lamps, branded as d.lights, would shell out for themselves because she and her husband, who farms a little plot, would no longer have to pay £8 a month in fuel for their kerosene lamp.


That is a considerable conserving when you earn just 3,000 Kenyan Shillings (£22) per month. A reputable light in the evenings would enable Sigei to assist her 12-year-previous daughter, who is struggling at college, and let her 14-12 months-previous son indulge his curiosity in science.


It has also allowed Sigei to research for a diploma that could see her promoted to a complete educating work and her earnings trebled.


Rhoda Sigai Rhoda Sigei, a nursery instructor in Bomet county, is now studying for a diploma that could see her promoted. Photograph: Nichole Sobecki


The d.lights are part of a variety of tough and reasonably priced solar lamps produced by Sunny Cash, a subsidiary of the United kingdom charity Solar Help. By investing in Sunny Cash, Solar Help has enabled the company to spread to much more remote regions such as Bomet, where other shareholder-led ventures may possibly dread to tread. The truth that they have a philanthropic rather than purely industrial investor affords them extra time to get new markets up and running.


Chepnyaliliet, an hour’s drive in excess of rutted tracks from the nearest paved road, is dark after nightfall, like much of Kenya. The single power line that has run because 2011 to Sigei’s school is not connected to any of the close by properties. Fewer than twenty% of residences in east Africa’s largest economic system have accessibility to electricity and there is nothing at all to suggest hamlets like this, in which numerous of Kenya’s 43 million folks live, will be linked to the nationwide grid anytime soon.


Sunny Money functions by approaching schools and persuading headteachers like Chepnyaliliet’s Richard Bii that their items can transform their pupils’ functionality.


Milton Cheriot is a prime example. The scruffy 13-year-outdated spends his spare time falling out of trees, testified by the scars on his smiling face. His title is stitched into his jumper so his mom can make positive her six kids place on the right clothes. Now he persistently has light in the evening, Milton can concentrate on his homework.


“In the old days we would have a lamp perhaps three days a week. Now it really is each and every day. And it doesn’t create smoke.”


Nights spent straining your eyes to a flickering paraffin flame often led to headaches, itchy eyes and allergy symptoms, he says.


Milton says he reads for 3 hrs each and every evening. It really is paid off – he scored 86 out of one hundred in basic science, a mark that propelled him to 2nd spot in his school’s rankings.


“As quickly as people noticed someone they knew possessing one of these then everyone needed to have one particular,” says Bii. Mr B, as every person calls him, estimates that after one particular yr of revenue, virtually half of the 517 pupils at his school now have the lights at house.


The 53-year-old expects to post a massive improvement in his pupils’ outcomes this 12 months.


The cash saved on kerosene has changed what families like the Sigeis can afford to consume.


“Instead of just eating ugali (maize porridge) each day I can combine employing rice or chapatis.


“I am now balancing the diet for them,” says Rhoda Sigei.


Meanwhile, she has her eyes on a new assortment of bigger, brighter lights recognized as Firefly and the Sun King, which come with a separate solar panel and a USB port that can be used to charge a mobile telephone. The Sun King expenses £25, but she has previously commenced conserving for one particular and expects to have enough for an improve early in the new yr.


The willowy mother, common of the tall, thin Kalenjin tribes of the Rift, would like her son, Hasbon, to have far more alternatives than his father. The developing population of Bomet county means future generations will have smaller parcels of land to farm.


“I want him to do some thing different. Today farming has turn into too challenging and the plots are so tiny.


“I would like him to be a medical professional.”




Christmas appeal: how solar lamps are transforming life in one Kenyan county

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