Fenix International, a San Francisco start-up making solar-power systems for people with no access to electricity grids, is expanding in Africa through a partnership with the continent’s largest wireless carrier.
The company is extending its partnership with MTN Group to Zambia, targeting close to a million new users in the country over the next three years.
Customers will use MTN’s mobile money app to pay as little as US$0.20/day until they own the solar panel and battery system, which is about the size of a PC and helps people charge mobile phones and light up homes.
The pact with MTN helps Fenix target consumers with no access to banking or little money to pay upfront for the system. The wireless carrier, which has worked with Fenix since 2010 and was an early investor, is gaining new customers for MTN Mobile Money as it tries to expand beyond providing call and data connections.
Fenix touts its system as a cheaper and cleaner alternative to the kerosene lamps, candles and wood fires used by millions of people living in fuel poverty on the continent. About 15m Zambians, 80% of the population, live without access to the country’s unreliable power grid, Fenix CEO Lyndsay Handler said by phone. Fenix has a goal of providing electricity to at least 850 000 Zambians by 2020.
The deal is another example of the growing investor interest in off-grid solar power in Africa, with Fenix’s London-based rival Nova Lumos recently rolling out similar technology. Phone carriers like MTN benefit from such partnerships as consumers get comfortable with using mobile money apps for purchases. Fenix’s other investors include French phone company Orange.
Expansion
Fenix is already working with MTN in Uganda and expects its business in that country to turn profitable by the end of the year, Handler said. The company plans to expand into as many as 10 African countries in the next four years and to be profitable as a whole within the same period, she said.
The company is also working with Equity Group Holdings, which is a bank expanding in the telecommunications industry in Kenya. That partnership will use a similar model as the Zambian one, with consumers paying for solar power with a mobile phone app. Fenix is looking to enter Ivory Coast and Senegal within the next two to three years, Handler said. –– (c) 2017 Bloomberg LP