M-PAYG, which already is present in neighbouring Tanzania, said it was eyeing opportunities presented by Kenya’s plan of connecting all homes to electricity in the next three years.
The firm will supply pay-as-you-go solar kits where clients pay for use of the kits until the full cost of the equipment is recovered and its ownership transferred to the user.
The company founder Asger Trier said “We are very interested in the Kenyan market, partly because of the government’s 100 percent electrification target by 2020 with off-grid solar energy solutions being a big part of the picture,”
The government has set a universal electricity access target of 2020, to be achieved through a combination of increased connectivity of homes to the national grid and off-grid solar power solutions for remote villages, largely by private investors.
Solar equipment is exempt from tax as part of government’s incentive to spur the sector, seen to provide the country with the shortest route towards 100 percent electrification rate.
About a third of the population is cut off the main power grid in a country where electrical connections are done by a single distributor, government-owned Kenya Power, making the process slow and expensive.
The Danish firm now joins a growing list of multinationals that have made Nairobi their regional hubs for solar power including those from the US, the UK, Germany and France.
M-PAYG sources its solar panels and backup batteries from China.