On the Grid
Nate Heller 鈥98 is providing solar energy to underserved families throughout West Africa.
Nate Heller is ordering food at the La Gondole restaurant in Dakar鈥檚 Point E neighborhood when I reach him by phone late one afternoon.
He鈥檚 returned to town after spending the day in some remote villages in West Africa, where his company, PEGAfrica, is transforming the way people power their homes in C么te d鈥橧voire, Ghana and Senegal.
Throughout the region, it鈥檚 typical for families of four or five to live in one-room mud huts, relying on one flashlight or a couple of kerosene lamps to provide light for basic activities like cooking and reading. For the hundreds of millions of people in Africa who don鈥檛 have electricity, this requires regular trips into town, where they can purchase batteries, charge their cellphones and replenish their fuel supplies.
But Heller鈥檚 company, which he co-founded and of which he serves as COO, has developed an innovative way to make those trips and their related costs unnecessary by providing home solar kits purchased through a pay-as-you-go model.
鈥淚f you live in a village and don鈥檛 have electricity, you live in the dark a lot of the time,鈥 Heller explains.
鈥淭o power your home and to power your needs costs a lot of money because you鈥檙e always buying batteries, always paying to charge your phone. And for the amount of money that you鈥檙e spending on those things over a five-year period, you could pay for a solar kit a couple of times over.鈥
Heller says the major obstacle to people buying solar kits is that usually the upfront costs are too high. While people can spend a small amount of money each week on batteries over a long period of time, gathering a couple of hundred dollars at once to buy a kit isn鈥檛 possible, and getting loans is especially difficult, since they have no real credit history or collateral.
鈥淣ormal credit institutions won鈥檛 work with these customers, so we knew we needed to find a different way to make this work and to guarantee people will pay back their loans,鈥 says Heller.
鈥淥ur solar kit has a meter inside the battery, which can temporarily shut off power if payments aren鈥檛 made on time, which essentially turns the kit itself into collateral and allows our customers to build a credit history, then purchase larger kits and products from us, like televisions and other appliances.
鈥淪o it provides a path to financial inclusion.鈥