Deutsche Welle, 15 April 2014
The
Berlin-based Mobisol company is bringing power to places where there has been
none. By combining mobile phone technology and solar power generators, the
company aims to electrify African homes.
To get an
office in the Friedrichshain area of Berlin is not easy. After a long search
Mobisol managed to rent an office on the fourth floor at the back of an old
factory building. From a hallway rooms branch off where employees sit in front
of their computers. One room is used as a small workshop. The walls are full of
photos showing African people: standing around small solar panels in their
villages, installing solar panels on roofs of corrugated iron sheets, watching
TV in a small room, listening to radios or working with laptops. They are
photos of African customers and colleagues.
"They
are there to remind us that we are providing a service to the people on the
ground in Tanzania, Kenya and Rwanda, who are selling our products there,"
said Thomas Duveau, one of Mobisol's strategic heads. There are about 30
employees at the company's headquarters in Berlin. They work in various
departments from software development to administration.
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Thomas Duveau is a strategic planner at Mobisol |
The real
Mobisol product is not made in Berlin. The workshop in the German capital is
used to try out new ideas. All solar panels and batteries are purchased in
China and shipped directly to Africa. Mobisol's most important product is made
by the Schwedt company in the German state of Brandenburg. It is a yellow
plastic box, the size of a shoebox.
Inside the
box there is the control facility for the solar power system and a mobile phone
SIM card that connects the box with Berlin. The only requirement for the
technology to work is a functioning mobile network. That can be found, for
example, in Tanzania, Kenya and Rwanda. 85 percent of people there have mobile
phones but not all of them have electricity. They frequently use their mobile
phones for money transfers. For many, the only way to charge the phones was by
using diesel generators. "Our solar power systems enable people for the
first time to produce power in their homes," said Duveau.
Performance
on demand
The
smallest of the simple yet robust sets of equipment delivers 30 watts. In just
one hour it can be installed on a roof from where it provides light for up to
three lamps, while also powering a radio and charging a cell phone. The largest
plant produces 200 watts and can power a refrigerator as well as lighting several
rooms, a stereo unit and a TV.
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The Mobisol power box is simple and robust |
In Germany,
a family of four uses an average of 3,500 kilowatt hours of electricity per
year. In Tanzania, a family uses one tenth of that amount. Businesses, of
course, consume more energy. In response to requests from entrepreneurs,
Mobisol is currently developing a 600 watt system which can operate a small
workshop.
Via the SIM
card installed in the system, signals are received every hour in Berlin indicating
whether the system is producing power. "If not then we send a text message
request to one of our local partners, with the address of the customer, to
quickly go there and check the status," Thomas Duveau told DW.
"That
means we sometimes know before the customer that there is a problem with the
system that needs to be fixed. That's a level of service that is quite rare in
East Africa."
Customer
service includes a toll-free hotline in the local language and the guarantee
that a defect system will produce electricity again within 72 hours. 220
employees are working for Mobisol in East Africa, most of them in Tanzania. All
were trained in their home country by German technicians.
One very
important element for African customers is the micro-financing. Customers have
three years to pay for the equipment. It then belongs to them. Depending on the
size of the solar power system, they pay between seven and 33 euros ($9 to $45)
per month. That is often less than they have been used to paying for kerosene
lamps or diesel generators.
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Mobisol has 220 employees in East Africa, all trained by German technicians |
Payment
models
Payments
are made using mobile phones. 97 percent of the payments are transferred without
any problem, said Thomas Duveau.
"Should
a customer fail to pay an instalment, we have the ability to shut down the
plant from Berlin, thanks to the SIM card incorporated in the system," he
added. When that happens, the outstanding payment is usually quickly made and
the equipment is turned back on again.
Regular
payments are vital for the company's survival. During its first years, Mobisol
received some funding from the European Union and from the German
Reconstruction Credit Institute (KfW). 1,000 sets of equipment were financed by
the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development.
Big plans
for Rwanda
Judging by
the age of the company and its employees, Mobisol is a startup.
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Mobisol hopes to have 10,000 customers by the end of the year |
Only three
years ago, the first prototype of the solar power system was developed by three
engineers in a garage in Berlin. The company started pilot projects in Tanzania
and Kenya in 2012. In April 2013, the company made its first official sale.
Currently,
the company has 3,000 customers and is expecting to have 10,000 by the end of
this year. Thomas Duveau is confident that Mobisol could become Africa's
largest energy supplier by 2020.
Currently,
the company is negotiating with the Rwandan government which wants to provide
70 percent of the population with access to electricity by 2017. At the moment,
this is only the case for 17 percent.
In Berlin,
the company's strategists are currently considering how they can combine swift
growth with good quality and service. Time is pressing - Mobisol has just
received an enquiry from the World Bank asking if it can envisage large-scale
production.
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