encounters on two wheels — Energising Development in Bolivia

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Energising Development in Bolivia

“Gifts are dangerous.” Not the usual communication at this time of the year, is it? It was an important message we took away from our meetings with Energising Development (EnDev) and Stitchting Samay in Bolivia. 

EnDev promotes “sustainable access to modern energy services that meet the needs of the poor - long lasting, affordable, and appreciated by users". It is a development partnership that currently operates in 26 countries across Latin America, Asia and Africa, funded by six donor nations. GIZ (German Development Agency) have implemented the programme for 10 years in Bolivia, resulting in 391,000 people with better cooking stoves, 441,000 residents, 2,800 institutions and 12k SMEs with access to electricity. Stitchting Samay, in contrast, is a small Dutch NGO, one of the many working with communities across Bolivia. They are currently working on four agroforestry schemes, and similarly to Endev, supporting the introduction of pico PV / solar lamps - around 3000 since 2001.

Different scales, similar principles

The two organisations work on different scales, but are ultimately aiming for the same thing. To be successful, they will help the community to achieve their own priorities, improve living standards in the most ‘effective’ way, and have an exit plan: be sure that the impacts will last longer than the relatively small period of funding or engagement. This means they share some key principles of operating:

  1. No regalos (No gifts): Beneficiaries choose themselves what is most valuable, needed and invest the large majority in it themselves. Community engagement and involvement is key. GIZ pay only $25 per household for a $1,000-3,000 transformer and pay less than $10 (10%) of each solar lamp. The rest is funded by partners and the benefitting families, often through micro-credit schemes. Similarly, Stitching Samay pay only 30-50% of each solar lamp. 
  2. Flexiblility and neutrality: There is wide variation in regions, landscapes, communities and group dynamics - and a programme needs to recognise this. As a result, both organisations choose whichever partner will be best placed in each situation: from municipalities, to other NGOs, groups, churches, individuals and everyone inbetween. Endev is also technology neutral: selecting whichever technology is most cost effective, feasible in the local conditions and appears most durable (including the possibility for local servicing and replacement parts) in each distinct situation. 
  3. The longer term story is essential: both projects aim to create the conditions for community members, businesses and other organisations to continue providing a service once they are gone. This means community / partner engagement and ownership, as above, is essential. Plus, ‘no regalos’, since large-scale ‘gifts’ can halt a country developing their own capacity and supply chains. This is a key consideration of GIZ/EnDev - they have a strong market approach, working with a range of market actors, trying to help develop the country’s supply chains and create sufficiently attractive markets for businesses to invest in rural distribution and servicing points. 

This is not an easy task…

“Just get it repaired at the corner shop!” The importance (and difficulty) of setting up local markets and distribution

EnDev increases electricity access for ‘productive uses’, to help rural populations start businesses or increase the productivity of existing ones. The team took us out on one of their electricity testing trips: to check if a certain machine operated at altitude and if a community’s rural electricity connection was sufficient. In this case, two ladies at 4,000m who were keen to try a milking machine. Despite the suspicion of the cows, the 1.5kW machine functioned. But only just. The engineers had concerns that the equipment may overheat after a few months, and that the capacity of the local 10kW transformer would not be enough, once more farmers also became connected. 

But the ladies were impressed. Many fewer hours milking, for aching arthritic hands. They were keen to buy the machine from the shop in El Alto, and would pay back the £1100 through credit over the next year or so.  

But what happens if it breaks down? There is no local repair shop, and these ladies do not have a car to drive anywhere with the 100kg machine. In this case, it would “only” be 2.5hours via public transport for them to reach the closest service center. But for a farmer living over the next mountain range, the return journey would be 10h. The shop’s service engineer told us they would come for major problems for a 2h trip, but a 10h return trip was unlikely. 

Installing a milking machine in rural Bolivia is the easy step, but ensuring it functions long-term, with access to repair services is a different, difficult step to achieve. The market is often not attractive enough: it doesn’t make economic sense for private companies to set up local sales or service centres.

EnDev is trying to overcome this in several ways:

  • Assistance for local branch start-up: EnDev take away some of the risk which businesses face opening branches in more rural locations. They help businesses either with marketing / communications (to increase the potential market: spreading knowledge of available products, from solar lamps to electric shearing machines), or providing starting capital or staff training for a new rural branch.
  • Build franchises and increasing rural ‘staff members’: EnDev have created a franchise model with the solarpower NGO, Energetica. They train local ‘promotors’, who sell the solar lamps and provide technical support / repairs in their local communities. When community members invest in a lamp, technical assistance is next door, not 10 hours away. The promoters can choose to take a set salary, or profit share with the local branch of the company, providing incentives for the promotors to seek new communities.
  • Increasing transparency of quality: EnDev talked about the high % of low quality products in the market, without a regulator or transparent quality comparison. This means banks face high risks in providing loans: a product breaks, and their client won’t pay back the remaining loan. Especially in rural areas, even if farmers or houses are keen to buy machinery or solar lamps, there may not be enough (micro)credit from institutions for a market to be viable. EnDev work with banks and suppliers and try to reduce this risk, helping suppliers to source and provide transparency in the quality of products. 
  • Working with a range of companies: to promote a range of different products and ensure there is competition and new in-country development in these new markets. 

However, creating a long-term attractive market in rural areas, with a functioning service and repair service, is a difficult task. Products and technologies need to be tradable for private companies to invest. The improved cook stoves “Cocinas Malena”, used by EnDev in Bolivia, are not. They are built into the existing kitchen with locally available materials, none of which are tradable on a larger scale. 

Plus, even with the above support, the risk for a business to invest in a new branch and staff members is often too high. Businesses know that the (well-meaning) government may provide the same product to communities for free and as a consequence, people won’t buy their product. 

Challenges for the long run

Supporting the creation of local supply chains and service centers is challenging, but crucial to ensure longer term impact and the development of capacity in the country. It is not the only challenge which Endev face in achieving this longer term impact:

  • More than just capacity building: In Tuni, all the local residents had attended 3 workshops, to understand how the micro hydro plant worked. But it takes more than a workshop to ensure that a hydro plant / solar lamp can be repaired and continues to function in the future. Some deeper technical expertise is required in some cases, which may not be available at the local level, or be possible to teach in a limited timeframe.
  • The “one of us” perception: Some technical knowledge is, however, possible to teach in a relatively short timeframe, with motivated learners such as the promotors. However, EnDev mentioned that the promotors can have difficulties convincing their community that they are now trained enough to be able to fix their electrical problems, or to be able to train others. As Ayni Wasi found with their health promotors up in Peru, there is the perception that “’one of us’ can’t have those skills - we need someone ‘proper’”.
  • Limited (technical) capacity in the government: The local grid and capacity of transformers is often only planned for lighting and small appliances, not for electricity in productive uses. We were told that Government gifts of solar panels or machinery can lack the correct connections to make them useable, or the wrong technical standards - a few years ago, the government bought refrigerators for milk cooling, but 60Hz appliances for a 50Hz grid. Less than ideal. 

Take risks and learn as you go along…

Both Stichting Samay and EnDev Bolivia feel that an important part of their role is to start projects, take risks, to learn and pass on this learning for future work:

  • Stitching Samay started a solar lamp project with the Tipni community, a rural Bolivian society with no money market. An agreement was set up that the community would pay back their % of the solar lamp value in cacao, once the harvest came in. Unfortunately, the harvest that year was spoiled -> no additional cacao to pay for the solar lamps. But, Menno, the director of the NGO, felt this was an important risk to have taken, to try a new model of working. 
  • Stitching Samay initially encouraged families to pay their 50-70% share of solar lamps through microcredit. However, administering small microcredits was cost and time intensive: collecting payments involved travel for hours to rural areas. As a result, the NGO searched and found a cheaper solar lamp that families could buy straightup.
  • EnDev initially started with a project stream implementing low-cost micro Anaerobic Digester (AD) plants for a group of households, using animal dung and household waste to provide biogas for cooking. GIZ routinely monitor and evaluate each of their programme areas. We were told that after one year, 90% of the AD plants were not operational anymore: families found them ‘smelly’, the plant needed to be maintained with a supply of waste, which was not a top priority for families, plus the outer plastic film was destroyed. Swift change of approach, and GIZ no longer focus on micro AD.

…and step out when others step in 

They react quickly. Learning when projects need to be amended or halted, but also stepping out if services are provided by others and trying to understand the real gaps in energising development. 

For Stitching Samay, solar lamps are beginning to be provided by others. As a result, they are moving towards productivity gaps related to soil quality, focussing on reforestation and agroforestry.

EnDev several years ago supported the installation of water pumps for irrigation, but others started to provide the same service. The team realised that undersized transformers - and thus limited power capacity on local distribution grids - are a significant barrier, and moved their focus there. As it stands, the two ladies we visited would not want to spread the news of their new milking machine to their neighbours: the surrounding farmers would not be able to run their own milking machines at the same time. Start at 3am, so you can be milking before your neighbours? Or hope that EnDev will help your community invest in a transformer of larger capacity.

La Paz and surrounding area, early November 2015

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