Afriq-Power is a Malian company created by Practical Small Projects as part of the initiative to support local enterprise. As there were no locally produced panels available in Mali, Dr. Richard Komp was brought in to train Malians in solar technology. Afriq-Power is now run by Malians who have found innovative ways to fabricate solar panels and solar ovens with mostly local materials at a cost less than imported panels. Practical Small Projects purchases solar technology from Afriq-Power, who also does the installations. Having a local company with solar expertise reduces the risk of the solar panels being rendered unusable when something goes wrong, as is the case with many solar panels scattered over Africa.
Watch the video below (or read the video transcript) by Afriq Power’s Daniele Dembele where he talks about the company…
TRANSCRIPT
AMADOU COULIBALY [School Principal]
I have 300 students, and the graduation rate is close to 20 percent.
JENEBOU [Student]
When we go to school, our parents have no one to help with chores. They pull us out because there’s no one to work in the house.
AMADOU COULIBALY
We are now approaching the exam period. In the nighttime, we give classes. And, with one or two lamps, it is difficult to see the blackboard.
DANIELE DEMBELE [Owner, Afriq-Power]
Over here in Mali, 80 percent of the villages, they don’t have … they have no light. It’s even not 80 percent, it’s 99 percent. Here, we’re talking about natural selection. The environment you are living in is really tough. So, to survive we’ve got to be tough. My name is Daniel Dembele. This project is about building some solar panels in Mali, with local material. To make it as cheap as we possibly can. And we can try to make it possible for villagers to buy it. My final purpose would be to have a business in this field. Why should I not make money helping my people also? This we can make in Mali. This also. The back you can assemble, if I teach you how to do it manually.
RICHARD KOMP [Director, Skyheat Associates]
So, we will make a 30-watt panel out of these.
DANIELE DEMBELE
First panel made in Mali?
RICHARD KOMP
These are the very first PV [photovoltaic] modules ever made in West Africa, as far as we know.
CAROLINA BARRETO-CAJINA [Fulbright Scholar]
Electricity was invented more than a century ago. And, for me, it’s just inconceivable to think that there are still places in the world that they are not able to have electricity. I think that it’s becoming a right.
DANIELE DEMBELE
Look over there, what is happening over there. You’re going to see the difference. Over there they’ve got the fire. You can see, there’s a kind of light over there. That’s the old way to get light. That’s the new way.
JENEBOU
If you’re educated, you can do things an uneducated person cannot. If you’re educated, you could help develop your village.
DANIELE DEMBELE
I count on helping thousands of people, not just 10 or 20 villages. If God’s willing I live long enough, I would like to make a lot of villages every year, so I’m talking about thousands of people every year. Maybe at the end of my life I could tell you I’ve been helping over 100,000 people in this country: building wells, building solar power installations, solar cookers, and all the stuff. My main goal is help them and make my life.
TITLE
Before Banko’s school had electricity, every year 20 percent of students passed their national exams. After Daniel installed lights, 97 percent passed. Today, Daniel’s business, Afriq-Power, continues to electrify schools and health centers in rural Mali.
TITLE
From the documentary film “Burning in the Sun”
Tags: Dr. Richard KomplightMaliTRANSCRIPTAMADOUvideo
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