We take electricity for granted in the developed world, but did you know that 1.6 billion people – a full one quarter of the world’s population – don’t have access to reliable electricity? The consequences are far-reaching: The lack of electric lighting impacts children’s ability to do well in school and prevents people from working once the sun has set, and dangerous kerosene lamps fill the air with soot and CO2 emissions. Enter Solar Sister, a nonprofit that is eradicating energy poverty one solar device at a time while empowering women with economic opportunity. The organization distributes solar-powered products like lanterns and cell phone chargers through women’s rural networks in Africa.




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Post tags: "clean energy", Africa, business in a bag, Electricity, energy poverty, indoor air quality, kerosene lamps, micro-consignment, reliable electricity, rwanda, solar cell phone chargers, solar devices, solar lanterns, Solar Power, solar sister, solar sister entrepreneur, south sudan, Uganda, women's rural networks