• Mining
Wednesday, March 11, 2026
Mining and Energy Namibia | Namibia’s Leading Mining & Energy News
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
  • Diamonds
  • Oil & Gas
  • Uranium
  • Green Hydrogen
  • E-PAPERREADER
  • Gold
  • Lithium
  • Energy
  • Copper
  • Zinc
  • Diamonds
  • Oil & Gas
  • Uranium
  • Green Hydrogen
  • E-PAPERREADER
  • Gold
  • Lithium
  • Energy
  • Copper
  • Zinc
No Result
View All Result
Mining and Energy Namibia | Namibia’s Leading Mining & Energy News
No Result
View All Result
Home Mining

South African solar power company pays investors in crypto

by editor
November 7, 2022
in Mining
1.8k 18
A A
0

When Abraham Cambridge flew to South Africa in 2014, he was struck by how few solar panels he saw in a sunny country with unreliable electricity.

Soon after, he started the Sun Exchange, a company that crowdfunds the installation of panels, eliminating the need for customers to raise the often prohibitive amount of money needed to buy and install equipment.

“You’ve got to put solar panels into locations where you have the most environmental and social impact,” says Cambridge, who’d previously run a panel-installation business in the UK.

“That drew me to South Africa, where it’s got fantastic solar radiation and escalating energy issues.” He zeroed in on schools, retirement homes, and shopping malls as potential customers—places that often find solar’s costs prohibitive.

Sun Exchange invites investors to buy solar cells, a constituent part of panels, for as little as $4, at a project of their choice. The customers who receive the renewable energy still pay a fee over a 20-year contract, but the cost is below what would have been charged for electricity from the grid.

Part of the income goes to Sun Exchange, so it can fund installation and maintenance and make a profit. The rest gets paid to investors. They can choose to receive South African rand or Bitcoin, with the cryptocurrency allowing easy cross-border payments to the more than 35,000 people in 180 countries who have participated so far.

“I bought a couple of solar cells for a Sun Exchange project in 2018, the installation at Sacred Heart College in Johannesburg,” says Nick Hedley, a 34-year-old communications consultant and writer in Cape Town.

“The earnings generated since then equate to 23% of my initial investment. It’s a genius operating model.”

South Africa has had its worst electricity outages this year as the indebted state utility, Eskom, which generates almost all its power from coal, struggles to keep its aged plants running.

Made in Africa

Until recently there were few alternatives for small businesses and homes to finance their own solar energy. “What this business model enables is, essentially, to use every roof that is available for solar, to allow everybody to invest in solar,” says Jules Kortenhorst, chief executive officer of the research nonprofit RMI.

Sun Exchange has installed panels for more than 60 agricultural businesses, schools, retirement homes, shopping centers, and facilities for the visually or educationally challenged in southern Africa.

One customer, Eric Brown, owns a remote farm in the semidesert Karoo region that isn’t connected to the grid. He’s relied on diesel generators, but in September he switched to solar. He expects his power costs to fall more than 60%.

“The biggest infrastructure problem is electricity supply, because you can’t pump with diesel, it’s just too expensive,” he says.

Cambridge’s first project, in 2016, was the Stellenbosch Waldorf School, which caught the eye of investors in the US.

Initial funding of $60,000 came from Boost VC in California.

Later rounds brought more than $8.3 million. It took Sun Exchange only three days to raise the R9.5 million needed to install panels at the Pioneer School in Worcester, 70 miles east of Cape Town, which teaches about 120 blind or visually impaired students.

“It’s cleaner and cheaper power, and we sell any excess we don’t need back to the municipality,” says Michael Bredenkamp, Pioneer’s principal.

“We save about R10,000 a month, and we’re helping the environment.”-fin24

author avatar
editor
See Full Bio
Share392Tweet245

Related Posts

Noronex confirms deeper copper zones at Fiesta project
Mining

Noronex completes Dordabis copper project sale, receives final N$5 million payment

  Australian-listed mining company Noronex Limited has completed the sale of its non-core Dordabis Copper Project (EPL 7030) in Namibia...

March 11, 2026
Petrobras engages Namibia on energy investments
Mining

Petrobras engages Namibia on energy investments

  Brazilian energy company Petrobras has held discussions with Namibia’s Ministry of International Relations and Trade (MIRT) regarding its existing...

March 10, 2026

Recommended

Germany hunts for hydrogen opportunities as Namibia targets 600k jobs

Germany hunts for hydrogen opportunities as Namibia targets 600k jobs

3 years ago
Tower Resources signs US$4.4m farm-out deal for offshore Namibia license

Tower Resources signs US$4.4m farm-out deal for offshore Namibia license

1 year ago
Load More

Newsletter

Black transparent logo for dark mode

About Us

The Namibia Mining and Energy website is a comprehensive online platform dedicated to showcasing Namibia's mining and energy sectors

Categories

  • Copper
  • Diamonds
  • Energy
  • Gold
  • Green Hydrogen
  • Lithium
  • Mining
  • Namibia
  • News
  • Oil & Gas
  • Opinions
  • Tin
  • Uranium
  • Zinc

Get in touch

Email:newsdesk@miningandenergy.com.na

© 2026 Mining and Energy | All Rights Reserved. The Namibia Mining and Energy website is a comprehensive online platform dedicated to showcasing Namibia's mining and energy sectors.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Diamonds
  • Oil & Gas
  • Uranium
  • Green Hydrogen
  • E-PAPER
  • Gold
  • Lithium
  • Energy
  • Copper
  • Zinc

© 2026 Mining and Energy | All Rights Reserved. The Namibia Mining and Energy website is a comprehensive online platform dedicated to showcasing Namibia's mining and energy sectors.