Ignite, which operates in nine African countries, has products that include a basic panel that powers three light bulbs and a phone charger, as well as solar-powered irrigation pumps, stoves and internet routers, and industrial systems. Customers use mobile money to “unlock” a pay-as-you-go meter. Yariv Cohen, Ignite’s ceo, reckons that the typical $3 per month spent by consumers is less than what they previously paid for kerosene and at phone-charging kiosks. He describes how farmers are more productive because they do not have to get home before dark and children are getting better test scores because they study under bulbs. One family in Rwanda used to keep their two cows in their house because they feared rustlers might come in the dark; now the cattle snooze al fresco under an outside lamp and the family gets more sleep.https://www.economist.com/middle-east-and-africa/2024/06/18/private-firms-are-driving-a-revolution-in-solar-power-in-africa
Ignite Power’s Subsidiary Westa Solar Secures $15 Million Investment from AFRIGREEN to Drive Solar Expansion Across West Africa’s