Solar Nigeria, launched in 2014 to build a market for distributed solar energy in Nigeria and funded by the UK department for International Development (DFID) said it has provided solar power to 92,000 Nigerian homes, almost half of them in the north, between January and July 2016.
It said all systems were supplied on full commercial terms with the householder paying cash, taking a loan or renting the equipment. Equipment supplied range from single bright lamps to solar home systems able to power multiple lights, a television and a fan.
The result maintained the pace set in the first quarter of 2016, when 49,000 homes received solar lighting or power systems through the programme. It brings the total of homes equipped thanks to support from Solar Nigeria and its partner programme Lighting Africa to 182,000 since mid-2015.
“Expansion of this market represents by far the fastest route for increasing the share of Nigeria’s population that have access to modern energy,” said Leigh Vial, Solar Nigeria’s consumer markets lead.
Supported by the Federal government, the programme’s first 16 partners, selected through a competitive process in 2015, included a mix of international and Nigerian firms, including veteran solar suppliers and highly qualified new entrants.
Solar Nigeria works to build Nigeria’s market for decentralized solar energy by removing market barriers through targeted grants to qualified solar suppliers and finance institutions, so they can build capacity and provide solar systems to consumers on commercial terms.
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