GBC G.W
ENGarrow
KOR ENG

Introduction
ASEIC
Greetings
History/Vision
Organization
Directions
CI
Programs
Greenhouse Gas Reduction Program for SMEs
SDG Program for SMEs
Green Business Center
ASEM Working Group
Eco-tone
ENVforum (Asia-Europe Environment Forum)
ASEIC Eco-Innovation Watch (Webzine)
News
Notice
Disclosure
ASEIC News
Gallery
Publications
PR materials
Publication materials
Webzine
Notice
image
HomeNewsNotice
What It Takes to Make Solar Power Shine
15 Oct 2012
 

What It Takes to Make Solar Power Shine

Excerpt : Khun Chantho, a 30-year-old housewife, spent most of her life without electricity until she bought an 80-watt solar panel two weeks ago.
Living in a small town far from Cambodia’s capital Phnom Penh, she would have had to pay $200 to be connected to the electrical grid. Some of her neighbors choose to share electricity with those already connected to the grid, paying $7.50 monthly despite frequent blackouts.
Chantho’s photovoltaic system costs her a down payment of $100 and monthly installments of $11 for two years.
“Since we got electricity, my baby cries at night if we switch off the light,” Chantho said, pointing to the small energy saving coil bulb hanging from the ceiling.
Chantho isn’t the only beneficiary of the solar power system. It is the same story for a group of young men and women in Takeo, an economically dormant province in southern Cambodia that even NGOs pay little attention to. The group built, sold and installed a photovoltaic system and aims to set up a renewable energy firm.

 
Publication date: 15 October 2012

Journalist: Kim Da-ye

Publication (link to article): The Korea Times