• Saturday, April 27, 2024
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Starsight Energy records high performance in 2020

How renewable energy can solve Nigeria’s energy crisis

Starsight Energy, a commercial and industrial solar power provider, has recorded a market- leading performance in 2020 despite the economic disruptions triggered by the COVID-19 pandemic. Starsight’s managed sites grew by 88 percent and revenue grew by a record 74 percent.

Starsight Energy is now one of the continent’s largest independent energy and cooling-asa-service providers delivering enterprise-grade solutions to its blue-chip clients. Over the course of 2020, Starsight added 280 sites— reaching a total of 528 sites. In addition, the company reached 36MW of generating capacity, 28MWH of battery storage, and 13,890HP of cooling capacity—a 110 percent growth across all systems over twelve months.

Backed by Helios Investment Partners and Africa Infrastructure Investment Managers (AIIM), two of Africa’s largest private equity firms, Starsight Energy aggressively expanded in 2020 despite a regional economic slowdown. The company closed a 10-year N3.6 billion debt facility with the Chapel Hill Denham Nigeria Infrastructure Debt Fund, and Norfund and Finnfund doubled their existing debt facility with Starsight to $20 million.

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Starsight also expanded into Ghana bringing its model of end- to- end power and cooling services with no upfront expense to a new strategic market, just as the first quarter of 2021 has brought strong demand for Starsight’s solutions – which guarantee customers 99.9 percent uptime while boosting their profitability and delivering sustainable energy.

Tony Carr, CEO of Starsight Energy, spoke on the feat: “For Starsight to have achieved such growth in a year as challenging as 2020 is a testament to our team’s unwavering commitment to our customers. We are very proud of the growth we have achieved but also of what we have done to serve our communities during the pandemic— beginning with the health and safety of our team, but also via pro bono work such as our powering of a hospital in Ekiti State, Nigeria to support rapid COVID-19 testing,” Carr said.