Powering Progress: Three Local Appliance Companies Generate Job and Income Growth Across Africa

CLASP has selected 11 appliance companies to receive funding in support of job and income growth in sub-Saharan Africa. This support will be provided through the Productive Use Financing Facility (the Financing Facility), an initiative managed by CLASP and supported by the Global Energy Alliance for People and Planet (the Energy Alliance). The Financing Facility aims to accelerate the adoption of clean, energy-efficient appliances to power small businesses and support smallholder farmers, potentially transforming the lives of millions across Africa.

Baridi, Irri-hub, and Koolboks are three of the 11 impact-driven companies selected for the program whose work is already transforming the continent.

Solar appliances drive economic growth

For a smallholder farmer or business owner in sub-Saharan Africa, even a single appliance can go a long way. For example, a CLASP survey found that business owners in Uganda who purchased an off-grid refrigerator were able to increase their incomes twofold.

For women, an appliance can be a major driver of income. In the Finance Facility’s pilot program, households where women purchased an appliance saw incomes increase an average of 94%. From selling cold drinks using a refrigerator-freezer to growing high-value crops with a solar water pump, equitable access to reliable and affordable appliances can transform not only individual lives, but entire communities. Solar-powered appliances can reduce the physical strain attached to traditional working conditions, expand business opportunities, improve nutrition, and create local jobs.

Three African appliance companies making an impact 

For Facility grantees like Baridi, Irri-hub, and Koolboks, this kind of transformative impact is what drives their work.

Baridi supplies solar-powered chilling technologies to smallholder farmers in Kenya, ensuring that their hard-earned produce remains fresh and market-ready.

Baridi's solar walk-in cold room in use at the Burma meat market in Nairobi, Kenya

Photo credit: Baridi

Baridi's solar walk-in cold room in use at the Mumias market in Kakamega County, Kenya

Photo credit: Baridi

Koolboks designs and distributes affordable solar-powered refrigerator-freezers, ensuring access for small businesses and farmers across the region. By providing reliable cold storage, Koolboks helps entrepreneurs expand product offerings and reduce the economic risks tied to spoilage.

Koolboks' very first customer, Mama Ibadan

Photo credit: Koolboks

Secretary of Mushin Frozen Foods Market Women Association, Mrs. Dosumu Elizabeth

Photo credit: Koolboks

Irri-hub is a provider of affordable water management solutions, including solar water pumps, that help smallholder farmers increase yields, improve crop predictability, and expand production.

Irri-hub customer, Millicent Kwamboka, in Kiambu County, Kenya

Photo credit: Irri-hub

Irri-hub customer, Belinda K'oile, in Kisumu County, Kenya

Photo credit: Irri-hub

Solar water pumps offer an enormous amount of income and job growth potential. CLASP’s report “Leave No One Behind: Bridging the Energy Access Gap with Innovative Off-Grid Solar Solutions” found that 87% of farmers in Rwanda who obtained a solar water pump reported an increase in their monthly incomes, while 64% reported hiring more laborers and growing more crops.

Enduring partnerships are the key to transforming lives and livelihoods

Both Baridi and Koolboks have longstanding partnerships with CLASP. Baridi was a finalist in the 2022 Global LEAP Awards Off-Grid Cold Chain Challenge, while Koolboks received funding from the first round of the Financing Facility.

This round of the Financing Facility is Irri-hub’s first partnership with CLASP.

From long and enduring partnerships to new collaborations, these kinds of local, on-the-ground partnerships are key to helping transform the sector, bringing life-changing appliances to the millions who need them. CLASP remains committed to strengthening these relationships and investing in partners who are creating green jobs and equitable opportunities across Africa.

About the Productive Use Financing Facility

The Financing Facility is an innovative program that provides grants, subsidies, and technical assistance to suppliers and distributors, helping to lower appliance prices and expand customer bases. The Facility makes it easier for small businesses, entrepreneurs, and households to buy energy-efficient technologies, such as solar water pumps, mills, and refrigerators, at favorable prices.

This program is supported by the Global Alliance for People and Planet .

For more information, read the Productive Use Financing Facility 2.0 press release, contact financing@clasp.ngo, and follow us on LinkedIn for regular updates on how the facility is benefiting people and our planet.

About CLASP

CLASP is the leading global authority on efficient appliances’ role in fighting climate change and improving people’s lives. With 25 years of expertise and offices on four continents, CLASP collaborates with policymakers, industry leaders, and other experts to deliver clear pathways to a more sustainable world for people and the planet.

About the Global Alliance for People and Planet

The Global Energy Alliance for People and Planet works for a world where everyone has access to affordable, reliable, clean electricity and the means to use it to improve their lives. Our Alliance builds transformative public, private, philanthropic partnerships to end energy poverty and accelerate green economic opportunity. Founded in 2021 by The Rockefeller Foundation, IKEA Foundation, and Bezos Earth Fund, we unlock finance, strengthen institutions, and transform markets, delivering progress anchored in deep community engagement. Our Alliance aims to reach 1 billion people with clean electricity, prevent 4 billion tons of carbon emissions, and create or improve 150 million jobs. For more information, please visit www.energyalliance.org and follow us on X at @EnergyAlliance.

Making the Switch: The Deployment Handbook for Institutional E-Cookers

This report, “Making the Switch: The Deployment Handbook for Institutional E-Cookers,” conducted by Efficiency for Access in partnership with the Modern Energy Cooking Services (MECS) programme, aims to inform practitioners seeking advice on the design, deployment, and operation of commercially available institutional e-cooking technologies and provide actionable recommendations for scaling e-cooking in institutions in Kenya. This guide covers commercially available institutional e-cooking technologies designed for both on- and off-grid applications. It provides:

  • An overview of the current state of e-cooking in institutions in Kenya
  • Step-by-step advice for the pre-assessment, planning, installation, and commissioning of e-cooking solutions
  • Opportunities to scale the adoption of institutional e-cooking

Download “Making the Switch: The Deployment Handbook for Institutional E-Cookers” to access key findings, recommendations, and guidance on electric cookers in institutional settings.

About Efficiency for Access

Efficiency for Access is a global coalition dedicated to advancing access to energy and affordable, energy-efficient appliances in underserved communities. It is a catalyst for change, accelerating access to off- and weak-grid appliances that boost incomes, avoid carbon emissions, improve quality of life, and support sustainable development. The coalition is co-chaired by UK aid from the UK government via the Transforming Energy Access platform and the IKEA Foundation.

About the MECS programme

Modern Energy Cooking Services (MECS) is an eleven-year research programme funded by UK Aid (FCDO). MECS is a geographically diverse, multicultural, and transdisciplinary team working in close partnership with NGOs, governments, the private sector, academia, research institutes, policy representatives, and communities in 16 countries of interest to accelerate a transition from biomass to genuinely ‘clean’ cooking.

In seeking to spark a new approach to clean cooking, the MECS programme researches the socio-economic realities of a transition from polluting fuels to a range of modern fuels. Whilst the research covers several clean fuels, the evidence is pointing to the viability, cost-effectiveness, and user satisfaction that energy-efficient electric cooking devices provide. Significant progress has been made in access to electricity in the last decade, but these gains are sometimes disconnected from the enduring problem of clean cooking. By integrating modern energy cooking services into the planning for electricity access, quality, reliability and sustainability, MECS hopes to leverage investment in renewable energies (both grid and off-grid) to address the clean cooking challenge.

Efficient Appliances are a Powerful Tool for Creating Jobs and Growing Economies

As technological advances like artificial intelligence and advanced robotics reshape lives and economies around the world, it can be difficult to imagine living without even the most basic electronic devices: lights, for example. But today, this is the daily reality for millions of people.

In recent decades, governments and other actors have made significant progress in extending electricity to those who lack it, whether in the form of power grids, microgrids, or distributed solar. Today, the communities that remain without power are those that are the hardest to reach. Located primarily in sub-Saharan Africa, they’re cut off from the energy needed for economic development.

Emmanuel Aziebor, who leads CLASP’s Africa program, has spent years working on solutions to this challenge. He spoke to Marina Baur about the critical role of appliances in reducing poverty on the continent.

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Marina Baur: Globally, there are 666 million people who aren’t connected to the electric grid. More than a billion others are dealing with frequent power outages because their grids are unreliable. A lot of the people in both groups live in sub-Saharan Africa. Can you give us a sense of how the lack of reliable electricity shapes their lived reality?

Emmanuel Aziebor: Well, if you look at the data around electricity access in sub-Saharan Africa, some countries have much better statistics than others. In countries like Ghana and Kenya, over 70% of the population has electricity. But the reality is, if you go to any of these countries, there are still people with no access to even basic electricity. And by that, I mean they’re in darkness for much of the time; their only form of lighting is something like candles and kerosene lanterns. If they’re lucky, maybe they have a solar lamp.

Woman with solar lamp.

Credit: Steve Woodward

Many of these communities are only about a kilometer away from the nearest grid. This happens mostly as a result of what we can think of as geographical difficulties: Maybe the community is on an island, or maybe the location is very sparsely populated—most of the time, the government only electrifies communities that have at least a few hundred people. This can become a self-fulfilling prophecy, since people leave those areas for the cities in order to get electricity and job opportunities.

So that’s one side of the energy access issue in Africa: Some people just don’t have electricity. Another side is that some people who are connected to the power grid can’t always rely on it when they need it. In countries like Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya, you still have a lot of blackouts. These happen in part because the utilities are in so much debt, which affects how efficiently they can operate.

Credit: Dreamstime

These blackouts don’t only affect people in their personal lives; they also affect businesses. We see this at CLASP. Our team in Nairobi works from home several days a week, but sometimes they have to come to the office anyway because of blackouts where they live. The office is the only place they’re sure they can get the electricity they need to be productive, because the generator in our building is always going to run.

People in all kinds of businesses are affected by electricity problems. Think about agriculture. Even though we have a lot of freshwater resources in Africa, it’s often hard for farmers to irrigate their crops because you need pumps to move that water and many farmers don’t have electricity to power those pumps. And if farmers can’t irrigate their crops, the crops don’t grow as well as they should, which keeps farmers’ incomes low and raises local food prices, which, in turn, impacts food security.

It’s also important to understand that people use energy to indirectly support their incomes. A long time ago, my father retired from the force and moved from the city to the village. That meant carrying all his appliances and everything to the village, where there was no electricity. So he bought a car battery to run this black-and-white TV. My mom started a bakery, and in the evening, people would come there to sit around and watch TV, and then they would buy bread and pastries as well. So that TV set indirectly contributed to my mom’s income. Without it, she would’ve earned less.

Baur: Thanks for that. CLASP believes that a significant percentage of the money devoted to building energy systems needs to be invested in appliances. That’s not a very intuitive idea; why do you think that’s important?

Aziebor: Well, electricity is like water flowing in a river. There are electrons all over the place, but they must be captured into usable form, and what makes that possible is appliances.

Let’s look at this issue from the macro level. Utilities set up generation plants and transmission systems to transfer those electrons to a point of distribution: a pole that is metered, with a wire that goes into a home. Currently, in the energy sector, we measure these poles and say things like, “We have connected 10,000 households to electricity.” But having that connection in your home doesn’t mean you can actually use those electrons. That can only happen through a device that draws that power and turns it into the services you need. That device could be a light bulb or a TV; it could be a fan or an air conditioner.

So the actual benefit of electricity only happens when people have appliances. And that’s actually true for the utility as well. If nobody uses the electrons they generate and transmit, utilities do not make profit. A lot of utilities in Africa are in debt, partly because people aren’t using the electricity that essentially just stops at the metering point.

 

Credit: CLASP
The actual benefit of electricity only happens when people have appliances. Emmanuel Aziebor

This is what CLASP focuses on, and it has implications at every level of society. At the individual or household level, appliances can improve quality of life, reduce sicknesses, and improve incomes. For example, in very hot places like West Africa, it’s hard to sleep without an air conditioner or fan, and if you can’t sleep well, your quality of life and productivity suffer.

At the institutional level, if you, say, provide high-quality appliances in health clinics and hospitals, enabling things like reliable refrigeration of vaccines, the provision of healthcare improves. It also becomes more cost-effective because you’re not wasting valuable resources that you then have to buy more of.

And at the small business level, businesses that have appliances will be able to earn more profit. This is very important for economies in sub-Saharan Africa, since small and medium companies make up 95% of registered businesses in the region. Today, many of these businesses are struggling, for a wide variety of reasons. Having better access to devices that turn energy into the services they need could really be a game-changer.

So when you talk about community resilience, appliances play a major role. They help people access better information, higher incomes, and less sickness. Appliances are how we turn energy into opportunities, into comfort, into quality of life.

A cook at a Kenyan school uses an electronic cooker.

Credit: CLASP

This is a very important topic in Africa. But for a very long time, it hasn’t really been explained—even to government decisionmakers—from a strategic position.

Baur: What could African governments do to help more people access appliances? What types of interventions should they be thinking about when they decide where to spend money or what solutions to drive forward?

Aziebor: If you speak to African policymakers, the main things they’re concerned about are job creation and economic development. So that’s what we focus on.

Seventy percent of the population in sub-Saharan Africa is under 30, and many of these young people can’t find jobs. If they cannot get opportunities in-country, they move out, and then we see all this risk on the Mediterranean. So how can we encourage African governments to look at appliance access as a solution to that problem?

Basically, we say that one way to resolve issues around youth unemployment and economic development is to utilize the abundance of energy that is available. A lot of countries have installed grid capacity that is not being utilized. Well, what if we used that capacity to support rural enterprises? About 60% of the labor force in sub-Saharan Africa works in agriculture. So there are major opportunities there, and we already have a good idea of where interventions would do the most good. Most countries are mapped out into places where there is agricultural productivity, places where you can have agricultural processing. So we could say, “Okay, we know this area is good for rice production. Let’s get some irrigation systems into that area to produce more rice and get the youth involved in this business.” Then, we could encourage rice processing, which adds value—we can provide rice mills to help people get into that business. And then those workers would earn money that can be invested back into their businesses. So with appliances, governments can use energy to catalyze rural economic development.

A farmer sets up a solar-powered sprinkler near Siaya, Kenya.

Credit: Futurepump

Another thing governments can do is introduce regulations to make appliances run more efficiently and eventually lead to lower consumption of energy. This may seem like a contradiction: If utilities need people to use more energy in order to be profitable, why would governments want appliances to use less energy? Well, the issue in Africa is that inefficient appliances have been dumped here for a long time. They overconsume energy, which creates an inflated need for grid capacity. And then governments build generation capacity to meet these inflated projections, which creates a huge delta in capital investment relative to the actual need. As a result, they’re spending money on power grids that could’ve been invested elsewhere, like schools or hospitals or job creation. Making matters even worse, these big generation capacities put the utilities in even greater debt because there aren’t enough appliances to use them all.

So our hypothesis here is that if we introduce efficiency regulations into the appliance sector, it allows the government and utilities to right-size the grid and right-size their capital spending.

Baur: Can you give examples of where this kind of approach has been tried and found successful?

Aziebor: Well, if you look at appliance dumping, African leaders have been at the forefront of a lot of these initiatives. For a long time, companies have sent products they can no longer sell in other parts of the world to the continent. This was happening with fluorescent lighting, which is extremely toxic, and African policymakers pushed back, which was instrumental in getting global agreement to phase out the production of fluorescent bulbs.

Lighting policy workshop in Kenya.

Credit: CLASP

I haven’t seen a large-scale program for other appliances, but I will mention a related example. Some time ago, the national government in Ghana came up with a way to transition all urban communities from charcoal to LPG (liquefied petroleum gas) as a cooking fuel, because we have abundant natural gas resources and the use of charcoal was causing deforestation in rural communities. So what did they do? They basically set up a government-owned LPG cylinder manufacturing company. They said, “Everybody, you’re going to get a subsidized cylinder and your first LPG fill-up is going to be free.” They also used a portion of taxes from petrol sales to fund the LPG program. All that helped people get used to cooking with LPG, since cooking is so cultural.

This program has been running for more than more than 20 years. Now, if you go to urban homes in Ghana, every one has a gas cylinder that they are using.

So this is one clear example where at the national level, the government drove adoption. And we see successful examples all the time with other kinds of infrastructure. The government provides the funding to build the airport and we all pay for flights to keep it operating. The government builds the road and we all pay a toll to use it. So these things can be translated into conversations about appliances—how public capital could be used at scale to address a particular solution.

But one problem we have in the appliance sector in Africa is that there are too many Mickey Mouse pilot projects. The problem has always been around scaling.

That means the government needs to be involved. For a very long time, we’ve had the impression that the private sector and nonprofits are the most important partners in the appliance sector. The idea was that nonprofits bring the money to derisk the private sector. But we must flip this equation. To reach the scale we need, we need to bring government to the table very early on.

The government is a fulcrum around which we all must build. The nonprofit brings philanthropic capital, the private sector brings commercial capital, and governments bring public capital to scale. But if we are not looking at scale with that equation in mind, it becomes difficult. We must be intentional. We know solar water pumps work; we know green milling can become a conduit for local economic development. So how can we get governments to scale these solutions, creating national programs where they invest public money into resolving both job creation and access-related issues? That is where I think the conversation should be.

Women use a solar-powered mill in Nigeria.

Credit: CLASP

Take a company like SunCulture, which makes solar irrigation. So far, they’ve sold about 200,000 solar pumps, which is just a drop in the bucket compared to the need, even just in Kenya. But what if we were able to partner with the government of Kenya to say, “We’re going to put public money in the budget to support to every corn farmer in Kenya. All you need to go is to go to your district government, sign up, and then you get a subsidized solar water pump.” That is what we need to scale these solutions, and that is how the issues around jobs and incomes can be addressed.

I want to wake up one day and find that my nonprofit job no longer exists because this problem has been solved. That’s how I’ll know we’ve succeeded. But that requires that public capital and public partnership.

Interview edited and condensed.

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CLASP Highlights Appliance Repairability at Africa International E-Waste Conference

In October, CLASP’s Mike Ofuya discussed our work on appliance repairability at the Africa International E-Waste Conference in Mombasa, Kenya.

The conference focused on:

  • Global e-waste trends.
  • The impact of technological advancements on recycling.
  • The urgent need for effective solar and battery waste management as Africa’s renewable energy sector expands.
  • The importance of taking into account every stage in a product’s lifecycle, from design and manufacturing to distribution, use, and disposal.

It brought together representatives from key stakeholder groups including regional governments, the private sector, development organizations, academia, and financial institutions.

Photo by CLASP
Photo by CLASP
Photo by CLASP
Photo by CLASP
Photo by CLASP

Speaking on a panel focused on recycling challenges and circular opportunities for solar, Ofuya emphasized that making appliances easy to repair reduces e-waste and saves consumers money. This is particularly critical in regions that lack reliable electricity, given the high purchase price of appliances suitable for those environments. For example, in Kenya, the cost of solar refrigerators is roughly equivalent to 85% of the average annual household income, making it cost-prohibitive to replace them if they stop functioning.

Ofuya’s presentation drew on the findings of CLASP’s ongoing research into appliance repairability, the Solar Appliance Reliability Index Series. An index providing criteria for assessing and scoring the repairability of solar water pumps, solar fans, and solar refrigerators is forthcoming in 2026.

Kenya Clean Cooking Week 2025: Turning Strategies into Action

CLASP team members joined the Kenya Clean Cooking Week in Kilifi County last week. The team showcased hands-on cooking demonstrations, competitions, and panel discussions, highlighting the role that policy support, financing, partnerships, and grassroots adoption plays in accelerating progress.

Photo by CLASP.
The winners of CLASP's clean cooking competition hold their prizes (induction cooktops and cookware).

Photo by CLASP.
CLASP's Nyamolo Abagi participates in a panel discussion at Clean Cooking Week 2025.

Photo by CLASP.
Kilifi residents visit CLASP and MECS' exhibition booth at Clean Cooking Week 2025.

Photo by CLASP.
Mama Rachel Ruto, First Lady of Kenya, tries out an induction cooktop at CLASP and MECS' exhibition booth.

Photo by CLASP.
CLASP team members with a representative from Ecobora.

Photo by CLASP.
A representative from Kenya Power visits CLASP and MECS' exhibition booth.

Photo by CLASP.
Contestants of CLASP's clean cooking competition present their dishes to the judges.

Photo by CLASP.
CLASP's Emmanuel Aziebor at Clean Cooking Week 2025.

Photo by CLASP.
Clean cooking competition judge gives feedback to contestants.

Photo by CLASP.
CLASP's Mike Ofuya participates in a panel discussion at Clean Cooking Week 2025.

Why clean cooking matters


Over the past decade, Kenya has made remarkable progress in clean cooking. The share of Kenyans using clean cooking solutions has more than doubled, rising from 15% to 31%, making it the fastest growth rate of clean cooking in Sub-Saharan Africa1. This momentum has been supported by broader advances in electrification. Electricity access in Kenya grew from 37% in 2013 to 79% in 20232, creating a strong foundation for the wider adoption of clean cooking.

Despite this, around 68.5% of the population still relies on firewood, charcoal, or kerosene; with firewood remaining the main cooking fuel3. These fuels come at a high cost. They degrade forests, pollute the air, and are linked to serious health problems ranging from heart disease and strokes to cancer4.

Electric cooking (e-cooking) appliances like induction cooktops and electric pressure cookers offer a safer, cleaner alternative. They eliminate smoke, reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and help curb deforestation by replacing wood and charcoal. They also make kitchens safer by minimizing risks of burns, fires, and explosions, improving the lives of whole communities.

CLASP at Clean Cooking Week 2025


Along with our international and local partners, Ecobora, Gamos East Africa, and MECS, CLASP hosted a cooking competition at our exhibition booth. Contestants prepared dishes of their choice on induction cooktops, using locally available ingredients.

After the cook-off, participants noted things like:

  • “The appliances were surprisingly easy to use.”
  • “No smoke was produced compared to firewood.”
  • “The cooktop felt safe to use and minimized risks like burns.”

The competition showed that clean cooking is not just a climate or health solution, it’s a practical, safe, and efficient choice that improves people’s lives.

With representatives from the Clean Cooking Delivery Unit, GIZ, Kilifi County Government, the Office of the First Lady of Kenya, Practical Action, and UK PACT, CLASP’s Nyamolo Abagi (Director, Clean Energy Access) joined a panel on the importance of partnerships in delivering transformational change across the clean cooking sector. She emphasized that partnerships must extend beyond the usual stakeholders and include the people who use these technologies every day.

We work with governments, manufacturers, development partners and policymakers – but just as importantly, we partner with everyday users as citizen scientists. They’re not just recipients of technology; they’re co-creators of these solutions. Their lived experience brings critical insights that help shape appliances that are not only efficient, but usable, affordable, and trusted. That’s how we build clean cooking ecosystems that last.

Nyamolo Abagi
Director, Clean Energy Access

In a panel on equity and inclusion, including representatives from Kilifi County Government, Mwangaza Light, Practical Action, SOLCO Partnership, SNV, and WWF, CLASP’s Mike Ofuya (Associate, Clean Energy Access) highlighted the hidden costs of cooking with firewood and charcoal in schools. He noted that shifting to e-cooking appliances can significantly improve health outcomes while freeing up financial and human resources currently consumed by firewood use. These savings could instead fund better food, educational supplies, and infrastructure, while strengthening learning outcomes across the country.

Partnerships to push forward


The Government of Kenya aims to achieve universal access to clean cooking by 2028. CLASP is working alongside partners like Ecobora, MECS, and Jikoni Magic to accelerate this goal, by promoting the adoption of affordable, energy-efficient cooking appliances and raising awareness of their benefits.

Clean Cooking Week 2025 sent a clear message. The time for strategizing has passed, it’s time for action that delivers healthier homes, stronger economies, and a safer environment.

More information at www.clasp.ngo/appliances/electric-cooking-appliances.

 

 

About the event:

Kenya’s Clean Cooking Week is organized by the Clean Cooking Association of Kenya in partnership with the Ministry of Energy and Petroleum, and the 2025 edition ran from 26 to 28 August. This year’s theme, “Implementing Clean Cooking Strategies and County Energy Plans: Transformation, Inclusivity and Empowerment”, focused on turning strategies into action.

The event gathered diverse stakeholders, including government representatives, industry, civil society, development partners, and academia, all united by the goal of achieving universal access to clean cooking.

0. “Kenya National Cooking Strategy 2024-2028”, Ministry of Energy and Petroleum.  https://www.energy.go.ke/sites/default/files/KAWI/Publication/Kenya%20National%20Cooking%20Transition%20Strategy_Signed.pdf

1. “Kenya 2024 Energy Policy Review”, International Energy Agency, April 2025. https://www.iea.org/reports/kenya-2024

2. “Kenya National Cooking Strategy 2024-2028”, Ministry of Energy and Petroleum. https://www.energy.go.ke/sites/default/files/KAWI/Publication/Kenya%20National%20Cooking%20Transition%20Strategy_Signed.pdf

3. ”Household air pollution”, World Health Organization, October 16, 2024. https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/household-air-pollution-and-health

Medical Appliances for Resource-Constrained Settings

With this research, CLASP and Sustainable Energy for All (SEforALL) highlight the urgent need to improve the performance, procurement and deployment of medical appliances in healthcare facilities operating in weak- and off-grid settings. The report uncovers how energy-intensive, poorly matched, and under-maintained medical devices are contributing to poor health outcomes and increasing operational strain in low-resource environments.

Drawing on real-world data from 29 healthcare facilities in Kisumu County, Kenya, the report presents insights from on-site testing, remote energy monitoring, and interviews with frontline healthcare workers and system stakeholders.

The study identifies practical solutions for more effective healthcare electrification  from integrating energy efficiency into procurement policies, to establishing minimum energy performance standards and investing in local innovation. It emphasizes the importance of designing systems that match real-world usage patterns, reduce operational costs and strengthen the long-term sustainability of electrification investments.

Explore “Medical Appliances for Resource-Constrained Settings for more findings.

This research was supported by Efficiency for Access, Ikea Foundation, and Transforming Energy Access.

About Efficiency for Access 

Efficiency for Access is a global coalition dedicated to advancing access to energy and affordable, energy efficient appliances. It is co-managed by CLASP and Energy Saving Trust.

0. “Kenya National Cooking Strategy 2024-2028”, Ministry of Energy and Petroleum.  https://www.energy.go.ke/sites/default/files/KAWI/Publication/Kenya%20National%20Cooking%20Transition%20Strategy_Signed.pdf

1. “Kenya 2024 Energy Policy Review”, International Energy Agency, April 2025. https://www.iea.org/reports/kenya-2024

2. “Kenya National Cooking Strategy 2024-2028”, Ministry of Energy and Petroleum. https://www.energy.go.ke/sites/default/files/KAWI/Publication/Kenya%20National%20Cooking%20Transition%20Strategy_Signed.pdf

3. ”Household air pollution”, World Health Organization, October 16, 2024. https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/household-air-pollution-and-health

Kenya

0. “Kenya National Cooking Strategy 2024-2028”, Ministry of Energy and Petroleum.  https://www.energy.go.ke/sites/default/files/KAWI/Publication/Kenya%20National%20Cooking%20Transition%20Strategy_Signed.pdf

1. “Kenya 2024 Energy Policy Review”, International Energy Agency, April 2025. https://www.iea.org/reports/kenya-2024

2. “Kenya National Cooking Strategy 2024-2028”, Ministry of Energy and Petroleum. https://www.energy.go.ke/sites/default/files/KAWI/Publication/Kenya%20National%20Cooking%20Transition%20Strategy_Signed.pdf

3. ”Household air pollution”, World Health Organization, October 16, 2024. https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/household-air-pollution-and-health

Bridging the Gap: Efficient Appliances in Healthcare

Access to healthcare is a fundamental human right, but for more than 600 million Africans, it remains unattainable. Frequent power cuts and incompatible, power-hungry medical equipment makes it difficult and expensive to provide essential medical services to rural communities. This means patients suffer: mothers give birth in darkness, premature babies lack incubators to help them survive, and preventative care for a wide range of treatable conditions is unavailable.

Designing medical appliances tailored to the different energy settings across the continent is key to improving healthcare in off and weak-grid communities.

Mismatched equipment and energy

Medical equipment, from basic diagnostic equipment to life-saving devices like incubators and vaccine refrigerators, often fail in areas with unreliable energy. They are designed for stable grids in different contexts, which means that around 70% of medical devices in the Global South do not function and go unused. To date, little progress has been made in the adoption of energy-efficient medical appliances.

“Most of the electric medical appliances do not conform to the wiring system and their electricity demands are too high in terms of their voltage, leading to frequent damage of appliances and high electricity bills,” says Victor Ajumbo, the Facility in Charge at the Ober Kamoth Sub-County Hospital in Kisumu.

CLASP, in partnership with SEforALL, is studying the efficiency and performance of medical appliances in off and weak-grid clinics in Kisumu, Kenya–one of the first attempts to assess the suitability of conventional medical devices and appliances in energy-constrained settings. Findings from the Medical Appliances for Clinic Electrification project will help manufacturers design appliances that are better suited to these contexts and support governments in developing appropriate clinic electrification solutions.

CLASP’s Emily Bolo tests the efficiency of a ventilator at Jaramogi Oginga Odinga Teaching and Referral Hospital.

Energy efficiency matters in healthcare

Reliable energy and efficient medical appliances are key to addressing Kenya’s healthcare energy gap, where 26% of facilities lack electricity and only 15% have access to reliable power. Many clinic electrification projects install energy systems that are too small or unreliable to meet the needs of their medical equipment. Frequent power cuts and voltage fluctuations often destroy the equipment. Studying the energy consumption of medical equipment is the first step to understanding the scale of the problem and designing appropriate appliances that can safely deliver reliable healthcare in these unique contexts.

“We can’t conduct baby deliveries when there is a power outage,” says Irene Akello, Facility in Charge at the Kuoyo Health Centre in Kisumu County. “It’s a risk the facility cannot take, so pregnant mothers are referred elsewhere. Reliable energy is essential to power critical devices like the resuscitaire (incubator), which supports babies born in critical condition.”

The CLASP team and implementing partners evaluating the energy efficiency of hospital equipment at the Kisumu County Referral Hospital.

Reliable cooling creates opportunities for growth

Energy efficient appliances not only improve access to healthcare in complex settings but also greatly contribute to sustainability in Africa’s medical sector. Hospitals require around 119 kWh of electricity per square meter annually to function properly, making them one of the most energy-demanding institutions to run. To put this into perspective, a single hospital bed needs as much power as three to four single-family houses. Replacing the inefficient devices in medical facilities with energy efficient alternatives can help to reduce electricity consumption, which in turn cuts operating costs and reduces carbon emissions.

“The healthcare sector contributes 5% of global greenhouse gas emissions globally. Around 71% of that comes from supply chains, which include medical appliances. Transitioning to efficient appliances can lower this impact considerably while supporting clinics in off and weak-grid areas to buy the right equipment to serve their communities,” says CLASP’s Emily Bolo.

CLASP’s Emily Bolo and Ruth Kimani inspect a resuscitaire machine with the medical team at Lumumba Sub-County Hospital in Kisumu.

A path forward

Africa’s ever-changing landscape needs an energy system that matches its diversity and growth, and the demands that come with it. Efficient medical appliances are an important part of this system and can be a game changer for healthcare delivery in Africa’s off and weak-grid communities.

CLASP’s research in Kenya is a crucial step towards bridging the gap between energy and healthcare. With the right energy systems and efficient appliances that match them, under-resourced communities can come one step closer to rightly realising their fundamental human right to healthcare.

Read the groundbreaking report, “Medical appliances for resource-constrained settings.”

 

Sign up for our newsletter to read our upcoming report, “Efficient Appliances for Health Clinic Electrification,” launching in March 2025.

0. “Kenya National Cooking Strategy 2024-2028”, Ministry of Energy and Petroleum.  https://www.energy.go.ke/sites/default/files/KAWI/Publication/Kenya%20National%20Cooking%20Transition%20Strategy_Signed.pdf

1. “Kenya 2024 Energy Policy Review”, International Energy Agency, April 2025. https://www.iea.org/reports/kenya-2024

2. “Kenya National Cooking Strategy 2024-2028”, Ministry of Energy and Petroleum. https://www.energy.go.ke/sites/default/files/KAWI/Publication/Kenya%20National%20Cooking%20Transition%20Strategy_Signed.pdf

3. ”Household air pollution”, World Health Organization, October 16, 2024. https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/household-air-pollution-and-health

Emmanuel Aziebor is CLASP’s new Senior Director for Africa

CLASP welcomes Emmanuel Aziebor as the new Senior Director of our Africa portfolio. In this role, Emmanuel will lead CLASP’s efforts to mitigate climate change and improve lives and livelihoods through affordable, efficient appliances.

CLASP has been working in Africa since 2012. Most of the projects and research carried out in the continent focus on how efficient, high-quality appliances alleviate energy poverty and promote sustainable development. CLASP drives technology innovation and catalyzes appliance market growth, putting efficient, affordable, high-quality appliances and equipment within reach of low-income families and communities, as well as smallholder farmers. In 2017, CLASP opened its Nairobi office.

Emmanuel is an accomplished international development leader with over a decade of experience in renewable energy. His expertise includes business model innovation, private-sector partnerships, energy policy formulation, and catalyzing off-grid energy solutions to scale.

 

“Expanding access to efficient appliances is the key to climate-resilient development. I’m thrilled to be part of the CLASP team leading the charge on energy efficiency and increasing access to clean energy technology across Africa. I look forward to collaborating with partners across the continent to create meaningful change for people and planet.” – Emmanuel Aziebor, CLASP’s Senior Director of Africa

Emmanuel holds a Master’s in Energy and Sustainable Management from the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology and a Bachelor’s (Hons) in Business Administration (Banking and Finance) from the University of Ghana Business School.

Before joining CLASP, he led global programs at Mercy Corps delivering sustainable energy services to displaced communities through public-private partnerships.

As a trusted voice in the climate change and clean energy fields, Emmanuel brings an extensive understanding of the renewable energy landscape in Africa and a passion for driving impactful change across the continent.

CLASP is delighted to welcome Emmanuel to the team and looks forward to expanding the organization’s impactful work in Africa under his leadership.

0. “Kenya National Cooking Strategy 2024-2028”, Ministry of Energy and Petroleum.  https://www.energy.go.ke/sites/default/files/KAWI/Publication/Kenya%20National%20Cooking%20Transition%20Strategy_Signed.pdf

1. “Kenya 2024 Energy Policy Review”, International Energy Agency, April 2025. https://www.iea.org/reports/kenya-2024

2. “Kenya National Cooking Strategy 2024-2028”, Ministry of Energy and Petroleum. https://www.energy.go.ke/sites/default/files/KAWI/Publication/Kenya%20National%20Cooking%20Transition%20Strategy_Signed.pdf

3. ”Household air pollution”, World Health Organization, October 16, 2024. https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/household-air-pollution-and-health

Brighter Futures for Rural Youth with Solar

Solar-powered farm equipment could be a crucial tool in overcoming the challenge of unemployment in rural areas across many emerging economies, according to new research by Efficiency for Access and Power for All.  The solar irrigation sector in India and Kenya alone has the potential to create over 115,000 jobs by 2030.

The report Green Jobs for Rural Youth  analyzes four countries Kenya, India, Nigeria and Uganda. It finds that there is a significant opportunity to combat youth unemployment through innovative solar technologies.

Promising findings

The findings are promising: solar-powered farm equipment could generate thousands of sustainable jobs, transforming agriculture and improving life quality in rural communities.

Abigail Kuria, the lead researcher from CLASP, who co-authored the report, notes, “These technologies equip rural youth with transferable skills and long-term employment while advancing sustainable development.”

Addressing barriers to adoption

However, affordability and awareness remain significant barriers to wide-spread adoption. Kuria urges, “Investors, financiers, philanthropies, and governments must bolster financial support and market incentives to drive demand for renewable energy in agriculture and tackle affordability issues. This includes funding interventions and rolling out awareness campaigns to boost technology adoption.”

For this report Kuria collaborated with Hannibal Tesfahunegn from Power for All, a nonprofit advocating and scaling solutions in the off-grid sector. The research addresses a critical data gap that has hindered effective policymaking and sector growth, arriving at a pivotal moment for those looking to invest in sustainable development.

Discover how solar innovations can open new job opportunities and benefit rural areas by exploring the full report here.

 

The Efficiency for Access coalition is co-managed by CLASP and Energy Saving Trust.

0. “Kenya National Cooking Strategy 2024-2028”, Ministry of Energy and Petroleum.  https://www.energy.go.ke/sites/default/files/KAWI/Publication/Kenya%20National%20Cooking%20Transition%20Strategy_Signed.pdf

1. “Kenya 2024 Energy Policy Review”, International Energy Agency, April 2025. https://www.iea.org/reports/kenya-2024

2. “Kenya National Cooking Strategy 2024-2028”, Ministry of Energy and Petroleum. https://www.energy.go.ke/sites/default/files/KAWI/Publication/Kenya%20National%20Cooking%20Transition%20Strategy_Signed.pdf

3. ”Household air pollution”, World Health Organization, October 16, 2024. https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/household-air-pollution-and-health