May 13, 2024
Global Renewable News

THE ASHDEN AWARDS - ASHDEN CLIMATE SOLUTIONS
Celebrating Solar Sisterhood' power on International Women's Day

March 6, 2024

This International Women's Day (8 Mar), Ashden are shining a light on the women who make renewable energy happen - particularly among the world's poorer communities where energy access is a considerable challenge. This year's International Women's Day has the theme  Inspire Inclusion'.

Traditionally, women have been far down the line after men to be trained in the energy sector, but this is changing all over the world, and particularly in the Global South with regard to clean energy access - there are now a range of solar training organisations that take a strategic focus on training women.

Solar technician training and entrepreneurship provides women with income, independence, new skills and improved status.

Recent studies by the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) shed light on an encouraging trend: the Distributed Renewable Energy (DRE) sector employs about 32% more women than the broader energy sector, where the figure stands at only 22%. While this is a step in the right direction, there's still work to be done.

Isona Shibata, International Programme Manager at Ashden, said: "Investing in women in the clean energy sector is critical to achieving a just transition. With training, skills and financial support women in clean energy not only build great businesses, but the knowledge and investment is shared with their family networks and communities so the change is sustained.

"On International Women's Day we want to celebrate all the women who are contributing to the fight against climate change and working towards universal clean energy access. More than three billion people face energy shortfall - these people are almost exclusively in the Global South. Training people in the distributed renewable energy sector is a vital means of getting communities access to the energy they need to lead normal, healthy and connected lives."

These are just a few of the trailblazing organisations training women in clean energy:

Bharatiya Vikas Trust (BVT), India is revolutionizing renewable energy by empowering women entrepreneurs. Through partnerships with local NGOs and officials, they've deployed 600,000 solar systems in India, transforming lives and livelihoods. These grassroots women solar entrepreneurs receive training and loans which provides them with new livelihoods, financial independence and confidence.

BVT won the Ashden Award for energy access in 2021 and have gone on from strength-to-strength since then. Key to their work has been BVT's liaison with banks, demonstrating to those who decide on bank loans the reliability of their workers' incomes and their excellent debt repayment records. When poor women are given support by local banks, their businesses flourish and their families and communities also thrive. BVT has trained more than 14,000 bank workers.

Amongst those who have received training is Revathi Naik from Udupi, Karnataka. She opened a solar powered textile workshop after joining one of BVT's courses. She says: "After getting trained for a month in 2014, I applied for a loan at the bank, set up four sewing machines and started my business. Today I am happy that I am providing a livelihood to four women and their families. I have also carried out a training programme for woman inmates from Udupi central prison, and I am proud of that."

Revathi adds: "This training helped me to stand alone financially. I am now happy and more confident." This new confidence she says, allowed her to stand for, and win election to, her village council.


Revathi Naik working in her solar powered tailoring business - she recommends her business peers and customers adopt solar energy so as to reduce costs and have a reliable energy supply. The solar and business training has changed her life, she says. Credit: Ashden

Imece in Turkey train women migrants and refugees to install solar home systems through their Solar Age project. The trainees refer to themselves as the Solar Ladies' and these dynamic women are mastering solar engineering to bring renewable energy solutions to the region.

Trainee Sandra Guylaine, a 28 year-old solar technician from Cameroon living in Turkey who has been supported by the Imece training programme, says: "Soft jobs and soft trainings became the standard of what women can do. But this time, I found myself in a solar energy programme I felt like I could do it as a woman."

Imece were a finalist in the 2022 Ashden Award for energising refugee livelihoods.


Women migrants in Turkey learn circuit soldering at Imece Insiyatifi Centre, Turkey. Credit: Ozge Sebzeci

Fondazione ACRA, Senegal run the Women-EmPOWER project and train more than 1000 women in solar energy business skills. They also train local women in the installation and repair of solar equipment so that they can go on to gain employment as solar technicians. Like BVT in India, they also have a strong partnership with the local bank, Banque Agricole, to provide credit for the women entrepreneurs.

With access to affordable credit and guidance, they're building successful businesses and paving the way for a brighter future.

One woman hoping to grow her enterprise is Maïmouna Biaye. The project supported her to buy solar lighting for her snack bar, which meant she could extend her opening hours. She plans to take out another loan to buy a fan and fridge. "Before the training I don't think I would have even dared to enter a bank," she says.

Fondazione ACRA was a finalist in the 2023 Ashden Award for Powering Futures in Clean Energy.


Grocery shop owner Mame Diarra Badiane from Oufoulo village in Ziguinchor, Senegal, has the only shop in her village powered by a solar lighting system. She received a training in entrepreneurship with Fondazione ACRA and was then able to obtain a bank loan to set up her business and support herself and five children. Credit: Laeila Adjovi/Ashden 

This year's Ashden Awards will take place in London at the end of June during London Climate Action Week, where more leaders in the clean energy sector will be celebrated for their incredible work. Find out more and reserve your place here: The Ashden Awards - Ashden Climate Solutions

Background

  1. Press contacts:   sue.wheat@ashden.org  mob: 07950 953004 Twitter: @ashden_org or Francesca.tute@ashden.org
  2. Isona Shibata, International Programme Manager and colleagues are available for interview. We can also connect journalists with all of the organisations mentioned in the press release.
  3. High res photos can be downloaded from these links:
    Imece Initiative, Turkey
    Fondazione ACRA, Senegal
    Bharatiya Vikas Trust (BVT), India

About Ashden https://ashden.org/
The Ashden Awards boost outstanding climate solutions in the UK and global South. For more than 20 years our awards have backed radical ideas delivering lower emissions and a fairer world, with grants and development support on offer to winners and finalists. Since 2001, more than 260 ground-breaking organisations have won an Ashden Award, recognising their vital role in using innovative solutions to climate change, poverty alleviation and community resilience. 

Stories of previous Ashden Award winners are available in the UK, Africa, Asia and South America showing how the Award has helped them scale up their businesses and increase their impact. See Ashden Climate Champions and contact the Press Office for interviews/more info.  

The 2024 Ashden Awards will be held in London at the end of June.

For more information

The Ashden Awards - Ashden Climate Solutions

ashden.org/awards/


From the same organization :
1 Press releases