Tue, 21-Oct-2025

Madagascar solar company receives financing to connect 50,000 homes

Madagascar
  • They aim at 90% of the country’s rural population that lacks access to electricity.
  • Off-grid solar power can economically supply clean energy.
  • WeLight enables consumers to prepay for their electricity through mobile banking.

WeLight, an off-grid solar firm based in Madagascar, announced on Tuesday that it has received 19 million euros ($20.57 million) to power 50,000 homes over the next two years.

Off-grid solar power, promoted by several start-ups, has grown in popularity in Africa because it can economically supply clean energy to millions of homes that are not connected to traditional electricity grids.

WeLight, which enables consumers to prepay for their electricity through mobile banking, is aimed at the 90% of the country’s rural population that lacks access to electricity, according to the company.

The European Investment Bank (EBI), EDFI ElectriFI, and Triodos Investment Management are providing funding for the project. In a joint statement, WeLight stated.

Axian Group of Madagascar, Norfund, and Sagemcom own the solar energy company WeLight, which already supplies 9,000 rural Malagasy families with electricity.

The company claimed it tested five mini-grids in Mali in 2021 and is looking into the potential in Nigeria and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Madagascar has a population of 29 million.

The most recent Madagascar expansion will include 120 new settlements and will cost a total of 27 million euros thanks to additional funding supplied in the form of loans from shareholders.

According to Maud Watelet, a senior investment officer of EDFI, one of the financiers, the fresh round of funding will assist the company in continuing to grow its activities.

[embedpost slug=”/billionaire-calls-for-revisions-to-the-failed-australia-asia-solar/”]

Read more

Qatar announces new solar mega-projects

Qatar announces new solar mega-projects

Gas-rich Qatar on Tuesday announced two major solar projects that will more than double its energy output from the renewable source within two years.

Energy Minister Saad Sherida al-Kaabi hailed the new development as a major step in efforts to “increase the reliance on high-efficiency renewal energy” in the Gulf state, which is one of the world’s biggest liquefied natural gas producers.

The new plants at Mesaieed and Ras Laffan will take Qatar’s solar output to 1.67 gigawatts by the end of 2024, Qatar Energy said in a statement.

Mesaieed and Ras Laffan are key bases for Qatar’s natural gas production, which is also undergoing major expansion.

South Korean conglomerate Samsung will lead construction of the new solar plants, with an initial investment of more than $600 million, the statement said.

While lagging behind other Gulf states in the solar race, Qatar has announced a target of five gigawatts of solar energy capacity by 2035.

Last month it plugged the 800 megawatt Al-Kharsaah solar farm into its national energy grid, according to industry sources.

Al-Kharsaah is expected to be fully operational before the start of the World Cup football tournament on November 20.

Organisers have used the huge solar plant west of Doha to back claims that Qatar will host the first “net zero” World Cup — where greenhouse gas emissions are compensated by renewable energy sources.

Desert sand and dust on the two million photo voltaic cells at Al-Kharsaah are cleaned each day by robots, and Qatar Energy said the same system would be used at the two new farms.

 

[embedpost slug=”vietnams-solar-energy-goes-to-waste/”]

Read more

Costco recalls 400,000 solar-powered umbrellas for fire and burn risks

Costco has recalled 400,000 of Solar LED Market Umbrellas made by SunVilla Corporation. The lithium-ion batteries in the solar panels on the umbrella may overheat Leading to a fire or potentially dangerous burns. The United States Consumer Product Safety Commission reports that Costco has recalled around 400,000 of the Solar LED Market Umbrellas manufactured by … Read more

Before the storm makes a direct hit on Earth, a solar ‘tsunami’ causes a radio blackout – radiation fears

solar 'tsunami

A solar storm has been brewing for some time and will make contact with the Earth’s magnetic sphere on March 31. The space weather phenomenon is caused by a disturbance in the particles emitted by the sun’s electromagnetic eruptions. It will occur after sunspot AR2975 erupted on March 28, causing a solar flare. Sunspots form … Read more

GHG main cause behind South China Sea sea level rise: study

south china sea

Chinese researchers have revealed in their study that the sea level of the South China Sea has risen by 1500mm since 1900. The study, carried out by researchers from the South China Sea Institute of Oceanology under the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) and other institutions in the country, focused on Porites coral, a wide-spread … Read more

AEDB to launch competitive bidding for solar, wind projects

KARACHI: The Alternative Energy Development Board (AEDB) aims to commence the process of competitive bidding for launching new solar and wind power projects from April 2022, an official said. The process of competitive bidding is aimed at increasing the share of clean electricity in the national energy mix to 61 per cent as per the Indicative … Read more

LCCI for restoration of tax exemptions

LCCI

LAHORE: The Lahore Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI) has urged the government to restore tax exemptions on solar panels, hybrid seeds, agri and industrial machinery in the larger national interest, a statement said. LCCI President Mian Nauman Kabir, Senior Vice President Mian Rehman Aziz Chan and Vice President Haris Ateeq said that the current … Read more

Fuel cost component of power generation surges 85% on yearly basis

Fuel cost

KARACHI: The fuel cost component of the power generation during November 2021 surged 85 per cent YoY to Rs6.32/kWh, mainly due to a rise in the furnace oil, coal and regasified liquefied natural gas (RLNG)-based cost of generation, official data suggests. “[The] RLNG-based cost of generation increased 166 per cent YoY to Rs17.29/kWh due to … Read more

AEDB signs solar agreements with educational institutions

Solar power

ISLAMABAD: The Alternative Energy Development Board (AEDB) signed agreements with five host institutions for handing over the solar data stations installed in 2014, within the premises of the host institutes, under the World Bank’s Energy Sector Management Assistance Program. Shah Jahan Mirza, chief executive officer of AEDB, executed the agreements with the host institutes. The … Read more