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4 Januari 2017 15:11

Retiring Solar Entrepreneur Leaves With Inspiring Notes For Indonesia

“Nothing I’ve done is really fascinating.” Brilio.net

By Hemant Chanrai

When I first started with Azzura in Indonesia I was one of the first people here to focus on bringing solar power to the poor. By the time I started, there were already lots of companies doing it in Africa, where its a huge business.

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In Indonesia, though, despite the climate and proximity to the equator, the market is still pretty small.

The goal is simple: make households energy self-sufficient, using natural sunlight to meet all their demands for power.

For ordinary Indonesian villages, power is wired in via the state power company PT Perusahaan Listrik Negara (PLN). But if the wiring just makes it to one house, they then sublease it to the entire village. This is SUPER inefficient. People are stealing electricity because they part of a massive, overlooked population that needs energy.

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Ive worked in this business for years, trying to make households and villages in Java energy self-sufficient, speaking to village heads and trying to get people on board. Soon I will start my own family and sadly its time to move on from Azzura Solar.

Azzura Solar

In Indonesia, as in many developing countries, has huge potential at its door.

There are challenges, though, and the biggest thing I have leaned in my time here is that they can be overcome and Indonesians dont have to rely on outsiders to do it.

Lessons from bringing solar energy to Indonesias poor

1. The people who need energy are the poorest, so you should be trying to get it to them.

2. If you want to accomplish something without conflict, do it via the village heads. That way, you get the whole village on one side, whether you persuade them or not.

3. People will generally just say yes if its free. You just need a way to get the message across.

Azzura Solar/Azzurra Solar

4. Partnering with charities who are already working there - let them act as a face and leverage of relationship with charities. Its like using an existing community to get inside. A foreigner like myself is generally less well-received so its a good

In the west, the private sector fills in these gaps between company and community, here its still the government and nonprofits.

5. The private sector has the ability to fill in these holes, but people have yet to see it that way

But heres the biggest one: People react to what I do as if it is something special.

Nothing I have done is proprietary that someone else could have done. Nothing Ive done is really fascinating.

Ordinary Indonesians can do what I am doing. The technology is here and freely available - it even overlaps with existing power infrastructure. Anyone else could have done what I did.

6. It just takes a bit of action.

Hemant "Rishi" Chanrai is the founder of Azzura Solar.

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