Star power: Togo bets on solar energy for its rural poor
Not long ago, every time he wanted to watch a football game or recharge his phone, Ousmane Kantcho had to "go into town" 15 km by bicycle on poor roads in the Prairies.
His village, Tababou, is more than 600 km (375 miles) from the capital, Lomé Togo.
Here, in one of the most energetic places in Africa, the houses will fall into darkness at dusk, because the village is not connected to the national grid.
The torch provides a unique light.
"After 6 hours of prayer, everyone is at home, there is nothing more to do," said Kantcho, a 35-year-old farmer.
"Everything is different now," he said, turning on the television.
Tababou has become solar.
"Everyone is watching the game at home and the kids can do their homework at night," said Kantcho.
Standard living installations worldwide Lights, televisions and electrical outlets worldwide are available through a 50 watt solar panel installed on the roof of Kantcho's wood paneled cabin.
Kantcho and thousands of others are the beneficiaries of a public-private initiative launched in 2018 to provide electricity across West Africa by 2030.
This objective, endowed with a budget of 952 billion CFA francs (1.57 billion dollars, 1.4 billion euros), will be largely achieved by bringing clean and renewable energies in rural areas, where most of the the eight million of Togo live.
Taking the plunge
Locally generated power is far cheaper than connecting remote villages to a central grid—and helps to wean Togo off energy imported from Ghana and Nigeria, which today provide half of its electricity needs.
"Not so long ago, we were really far behind other countries in the region, but we've gone full-bore over the last two years," Abbas Abdoulaye, head of Togo's agency for rural electrification and renewable energy, AT2ER, told AFP.
Only 30 percent of all Togolese had access to electricity in 2016-17, a figure that has risen to nearly 50 percent today, he said.
Half of Togo's population lives on less than $1.90 per day, the threshold of extreme poverty, the World Bank says.
People in more than 2,200 villages so far have taken the plunge by buying a solar home system, a kit comprising a solar panel, a charge controller to regulate power and a battery to store the energy for when the sun is not shining.
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