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There is a light that never goes out

There is a light that never goes out

NEWS ARTICLE | 26 NOV 2020 | LIGHT AND PEOPLE

The innate longing and love for light is something universal for mankind. But how do you cope with an everyday life where the access to electrical light, and/or daylight, for different reasons are limited?

Few symbols are so positively connotated as light. You “see things brighter”, it is “a new dawn” – semantically light is something optimistic and joyful that we desire. Light, or the absence of it, affects us in many ways. In some parts of the world the access to electrical light, and/or daylight, are limited for different reasons. This affects both mood and health, but also the possibilities to study or work after sunset. Here are some examples of how people living in the dark has taken matters into their own hands and turned the light on.

Mirror, mirror on the mountain…

One way of helping the sunbeams find their way, is by redirecting and reflecting them. This is something the small villages of Rjukan (Norway) and Viganella (Italy), has tried. Both cities are located in-between steep mountains, and the residents normally do not see the daylight for many months during the winter season. The city of Rjukan is a beautiful village along the Hardanger fjord, located in an east/west valley, with the mighty Gaustatoppen (1883 m) on one side and steep mountain sides south of the city. Due to its location, the people of Rjukan live in shadow for almost six months a year, which of course affects the circadian rhythm and the possibilities to have an outdoor life.

In 2013 three giant mirrors was installed on one of the mountain tops, mounted in the rock wall 742 metres above the sea, about 450 m just above Rjukan Torg. The mirrors are in total 51 m² large. They catch the sunlight and reflect it down to Rjukan Torg, where the sunlight is distributed in an 600 m² area on the square. The solar energy in the square has an effect of 80-100% in relation to the light captured by the mirrors. The mirrors follows the sun's brief dash across the winter sky, and reminds the residents that even though it might not show, it is daytime.

sun mirrors.jpg

Harvesting the sun

In other parts of the world, in the Sub-Saharan area, light and darkness follows a more constant pace. This makes the people living there dependent on electrical light for i.e. cooking or studying. In one of the poorest countries in Africa, Tanzania, 80 % of the population has no access to electricity. The majority depend on harmful fuels such as firewood and charcoal for cooking. Lack of access to power locks people into poverty and affects all areas of life. Energy poverty has a multitude of direct and indirect negative consequences on the health, education and incomes of women in particular and of off-grid communities in general. With initiatives such as the organization Solar Sister, this can be changed. The female entrepreneurs are given an business education, and are provided with solar cell lamps that they can sell to their communities. There are various forms of solar cell devices, all of them making the everyday life easier during the dark hours of the day.

Research from the Santa Clara University’s Miller Center for Social Entrepreneurship (2017) showed that with solar lanterns:

  • Students have a reliable, bright light to use for their studies and show significant improvement in their education.
  • Families are relieved of the damaging health effects from kerosene and no longer risk burns and home fires from kerosene lamps.
  • Households experience financial benefits by ceasing the use of costly kerosene, growing existing businesses, and starting new businesses.

Some solar lanterns do more than provide light: they can also charge cell phones. And all these benefits combine to create intrinsic changes in individuals’ sense of agency and power.

16.0.jpg

All in all, light – be it electrical or natural – is vital for us. We need it for household work, for reading or just for socialising with our family. As the examples shows above, the longing for light is a strong force that drives us out of the darkness. By own means, or with technical help.

More information on Solar Sisters

  • Solar Sisters is a NGO operating in Nigeria, Tanzania and Uganda. 
    86 % of the entrepreneurs are women.
  • During 2019, 1,7 million solar cell lamps were sold.
  • Fagerhult has been supporting Solar Sisters via our social initiative Bright Future since 2015. 

TEXT MARIA VÅRENIUS

PHOTO JERKER ANDERSSON, NICKE BÄRETEG, KARL MARTIN JAKOBSEN

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