The reduced cost of solar electricity has made electricity access affordable even to low-income households. Off-Grid electricity is playing a critical role in rapidly scaling up electricity access in many households that are far from the national grid and where affordability remains a challenge.
As the sun sets in most villages in Malawi, the dawn of darkness is also the dawn of anxiety for women, men, children, and particularly school-going children. Only 23% of Malawi’s population has access to electricity.
Many households must rely on battery-powered torches, candles, and kerosene lamps for lighting inside the house. The struggle for families to function in a dark house, just to locate things inside the house, is unimaginable, let alone maintaining security and performing food preparation.
School-going children must endure either studying in poor lighting or not studying at all.
However, this situation is improving for many households due to the advent of solar-powered lighting provided by the private sector with support from the World Bank and other impact investors.
Rose John Soko, from Shuga Village in Chiradzulu district, Southern Malawi is one of the people who installed a solar powered lighting facility under the World Bank Malawi Electricity Access Project (MEAP) which supports the Government of Malawi’s Off-Grid Market Development Fund (known as Ngwee Ngwee Ngwee Funding Mechanism).The effort is making solar powered electricity affordable for even low-income households.
The Ngwee Ngwee Ngwee Fund, meaning “bright” in the local language, Chichewa, is an integral part of the MEAP, established to provide working capital and grants, fostering the growth of the private sector-led Off-Grid solar segment of the market. Under this mechanism, MEAP has forged partnerships with five leading solar companies in Malawi, embarking on a connection campaign to provide solar home systems to one million people.
The package that Soko bought comprises four bulbs that light her bedroom, sitting room, storeroom, and an outside light for security.
I have always wanted the solar lights inside my house, because for a long time, I was using either a candle or a mobile phone light every night, but now I have been able to access it at an affordable price.
Rose John Soko Shuga Village in Chiradzulu district, Southern Malawi
Her access was thanks to a subsidized solar powered lighting system package known as Biolite, distributed by Yellow Solar Company which is one of the five solar companies participating in the Fund that is being administered by the Ministry of Energy. Others are Zuwa Energy, Green Impact Technologies, Vitalite, and Star Times.
Interestingly, Soko’s system has an added feature, a built-in FM radio, that she can listen to at any time, thanks to the power provided.
“Biolite package is a fast-moving product in many villages here because of its price and the added accessory, the radio,” says Ungopanga Kanyemba, a sales agent for Yellow Solar in Chiradzulu who markets the products in three traditional authorities in the district.
“From November 2023, when we started selling these packages under the Ngwee Ngwee Ngwee Fund, more than 50 households have benefitted, and the demand is increasing every day,” he says.
The reduced cost of solar electricity has made the package affordable, and customers have options. They can pay upfront for the Biolite package, at a cost of $58 which is about $10 lower than the market price of the product. Others also opt for monthly installments at a discounted price.
Junior Kalata from Sasu village is relieved and says that he no longer must pay for charging his phone at a marketplace because the new solar facility he installed at his house has the ability to charge his mobile phone and that of his wife, Charity.
“I also no longer spend money to buy batteries for my torch from the time I installed the solar facility,” said Kalata, as he smiles inside his small but decent iron sheets roofed house.
Such stories of transformation are becoming common in many communities in Malawi.
Akimu Nasiyaya, from Namputu village in Mulanje district, also says he used to light his house using an old car battery, which was frequently drained as it also had to power his radio and a small sound system. He needed to recharge it constantly.
“I can listen to music for hours
now using the car battery since it is no longer used to power lighting of the house because I now installed the solar powered lighting,” says Nasiyaya, a security guard, as he smiles.
Nasiyaya benefitted from the same Ngwee Ngwee Ngwee Fund mechanism in early February this year, though through a different company, Zuwa Energy.
Supply Chirwa, Mulanje District Sales Officer for Zuwa Energy says that on average, they sell the solar package to 50 households every month.
The 2019 ambitious $100 million Malawi Energy Access Project (MEAP) aims to fast-track electrification efforts and provide electricity access to approximately 1.9 million people, constituting 9.5% of the population.
So far, more than 140,000 households have been connected. This is about 3.5% of the population provided with access in the past 12 months, bringing the total access rate in Malawi to around 23%, up from 19%.
The target is to give access to 180,000 on-grid households and 200,000 Off-Grid households by the end of June 2025, translating to an additional 1.9 million people having access to electricity. These additional households will bring the total access rate in Malawi to around 28% by June 2025.
The on-grid connection rate achieved over the past 12 months of 70,000 has been the highest in the history of the country, since previously ESCOM could only manage a maximum of 30,000 connections per year.
“The off-grid access rate has been on an exponential trajectory ever since this access sector picked up some seven years back through other similar development partner-supported access initiatives, and the MEAP is building upon and scaling up on this foundation to support the Government Malawi 2063 Vision Access Target of 50% by 2030,” says Michael Gondwe, Senior Energy Specialist at the World Bank.
He says that off-grid access, which is simpler to roll out and lower in cost, is critical in Malawi owing to the large percentage of the population located in rural areas, where the electricity access rate is very low (around 4% at the start of the MEAP) and the on-grid penetration is limited and takes longer and needs substantial capital to expand.
Solar home systems might be considered “kick starters” towards electricity access because they can only support limited lighting and some basic functions like mobile phone charging and radio. Those currently connected might eventually want to migrate to either bigger systems or to the national grid. Nonetheless, such basic access for now is transformational to the lives of the people like Nasiyaya, Kalata, Soko, and many others.
For Malawi, Off-Grid access plays a very critical role in rapidly scaling up electricity access in many households that are far from the national grid and where affordability remains a challenge.
Read the original article on World Bank.