Power Africa Partners USADF, GE announce Women in Energy Challenge Winners in Uganda
Wed, Aug 23, 2017 | By publisher
Women
THE UNITED States African Development Foundation, USADF, in collaboration with partners Power Africa and GE, has announced the winners of the 2017 Women in Energy Challenge in Uganda, where only 20 percent of the population is connected to electricity. The Joint Energy and Environments Projects, JEEP, and Conservation and Development Uganda Limited, CODE, will each be awarded a grant of $100,000 to expand their renewable energy enterprises to reach women beneficiaries. Maria Bawabya Senkezi, JEEP’s chairwoman, said investing in women entrepreneurs was critical because “women invest money back into the community.”
The Women in Energy Challenge, part of the Off-Grid Energy Challenge, was launched in 2016 by USADF and GE to identify and accelerate enterprises either led by women or benefitting women, and help African entrepreneurs compete in the global economy. The Off-Grid Energy Challenge is a part of Power Africa’s Beyond the Grid initiative, which aims to drive private investment in off-grid and small-scale renewable energy solutions. By funding energy entrepreneurs, USADF is bridging the energy gap for some of Uganda’s most vulnerable populations.
Joint Energy and Environments Projects, JEEP, is a 100% women-owned enterprise in central Uganda. With a $100,000 grant, it will install 6 green power units in Kalangala district, a remote island district in Lake Victoria. Fishing is the main industry in this island district in Lake Victoria, but commercial ice to preserve fish is both expensive and limited. As a result, a significant amount of fish is lost before it can be sold in the market. The 6 green power units which JEEP establishes will each have solar-powered cold storage facilities for preservation, phone charging and solar home systems for sale, and each will be run by a women’s group trained in bookkeeping. The green power units will each repay a portion of their profits to JEEP to be used to replicate the model throughout the region. This will not only provide local jobs, but will increase incomes for local women.
Conservation and Development Uganda Limited (CODE) is a majority-women owned enterprise in western Uganda where surrounding national parks limit the amount of available firewood, and as a result, women bear the brunt of energy poverty, walking long distances in search of firewood and cooking fuel. Through the grant, CODE will sell an initial 350 Agro-Eco kits using a flexible repayment financing model, which will provide alternative and safer fuel sources. Using a low-cost distribution system using Village Savings and Loan Associations, CODE will collect revenues and expand their business to impact more and more households in the region.
The U.S. African Development Foundation is the only U.S. agency dedicated entirely to Africa, and solely funding 100% African-owned businesses and African entrepreneurs. USADF aims to promote innovative solutions that increase access to reliable, affordable and sustainable power – particularly for vulnerable populations who will have little to no access to grid power.
“We launched this Women in Energy Challenge to find the best and the brightest female entrepreneurs that are making a difference in bringing electricity to rural communities. We are very pleased to see that these women-led enterprises are showing promise in finding alternative solutions to Uganda’s energy crisis,” says C.D. Glin, USADF President and CEO.
“Providing energy access to Africa’s population is a priority for us,” said Jay Ireland, President & CEO of GE Africa. “The Women in Energy Challenge is one of our commitments towards supporting local entrepreneurs and we are delighted that African women-owned enterprises are solving local challenges.”
In Uganda, where USADF has a $5 million co-funding agreement with the Government of Uganda, USADF has awarded three Off-Grid Challenge grants to energy enterprises. Since 2013, USADF has partnered with GE and Power Africa to fund over 70 off-grid energy companies in nine countries in Africa, and invested over $7 million in Africa’s energy entrepreneurs, which has already resulted in over 20,000 actual connections benefitting over 100,000 people. To learn more about the USADF Off-Grid Energy Challenge, visit www.USADF.gov/off-grid.
– Aug 23, 2017 @ 15:59 GMT
Related Posts
United Nigeria Air boss distributes palliative to 10,000 Anambra women
PROF. Obiora Okonkwo, Chairman of the United Nigeria Airlines on Monday, commenced distribution of Christmas rice and other food items...
Read MoreYuletide: Arewa women canvass further reduction in petrol price
AN NGO, Arewa Women for Empowerment (AWE), has advocated for further reduction in the price of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS),...
Read MoreWe’re resolute on women empowerment, gender equality – Speaker Abbas
…as women council names Speaker ‘Global He-for-She’ ABBAS Tajudeen, speaker of the House of Representatives, has said the 10th plans...
Read MoreMost Read
Subscribe to Our Newsletter
Keep abreast of news and other developments from our website.