Share
100% funded by 412 investors
instalment
monthly
term
5 years
yearly interest
7%
risk rating
C+
With more than 8 years of experience in the renewable energy sector, the SolarPipo group is a Dutch company aiming to unburden the processes of acquiring and installing solar systems for cooling, water pumps, and other productive uses of dairy cooperatives in Uganda.
The funds raised through this campaign will be used to finance a solar energy project at the Kyeshande Cooperative in Kamuli District, in Central Uganda.
The Kyeshande Cooperative was founded in 2000 with 150 members, which owned in total around 180 cows. Currently, it has 400 members and owns over 600 cows. Additionally, the cooperative also has 300 non-members who supply milk.
The cooperative is comprised of members who make up the general assembly, the board that constitutes sub-committees of procurement, finance, and project management, the secretariat that comprises the manager and milk collection staff.
The funds raised through this campaign will be used to replace a diesel generator for an 11.88 kWh solar power plant (reducing diesel consumption to zero) and the acquisition of a battery rack (67.2 kWh). By recurring to clean energy, the current cost of cooling the milk will decrease, making the energy more affordable to cooperative milk producers.
The cooperative's main product is milk. The cooperative bought a 3500-liter milk cooler and bought a 30KVA generator. Cooperative is currently employing 1 manager, 2 casual staff at the milk cooler. The co-operative acquired its milk cooler and generator by members doing fundraising amongst themselves.


Direct:
Indirect:
CO2 avoided per year
jobs created
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This project fits under an energy savings model scheme where, by installing a solar power plant, the cooperative will reduce their energy expenses, thus being able to pay for the clean energy consumption and the loan. The solar power plant will not only decrease energy expenses for the cooperative but also make energy will be more reliable, resulting in a boost of production and longer working hours. The company will receive a fee to install the equipment and ensure the project funding. It will also provide services throughout the project’s lifetime (five years): customer support, training, maintenance, technical assistance, and optimization of equipment usage.
The average cooperative in Uganda would need an investment of 75.000€ (for equipment and loan costs) for a project such as this one. This loan complements an investment already made by one of the shareholders and another individual investor. The loan will be paid back in five years at a cost of roughly 1.235€ per month, after a 3-month grace period of capital. This is a very acceptable price for the farmers, given their current expenditure on diesel and maintenance. Counting total proceeds for the milk per liter and income, the Cooperative has a monthly gross profit of 6.602€. Diesel costs representing 8% of this amount (538€).
The total cows or production per cow is up to three liters per cow as it is a dry area and with 500 plus active dairy cows at a given time, over 1.800 liters can be collected in a day. The Cooperative is currently collecting 1.549 liters per day depending on the season. The cooperative does collective milk bulking and marketing for the milk collected from members as well as non-members to fetch a competitive market price. There are no current standing debts with banks, microfinance institutions.
Download Key Investment Information Sheet
Founded in 2017, SolarPipo BV is a Dutch holding company, based in Amsterdam. Its shareholders are Ugandan nationals and two Dutch companies - Rockstart BV and Beehaeve. To better deal with all the funding aspects of the group, the holding company created SolarPipo Finance BV, which in turn owns 100% of SolarPipo Finance Limited in Uganda. The latter contracts directly with the dairy cooperatives.
SolarPipo’s main goal is to ease access to renewable energy for the country’s dairy sector. The company provides its customers, typically dairy cooperatives and farmers, access to a cost-effective and reliable alternative to the grid or diesel generators. Their services answer to the whole sector’s value chain: from the financing to the solar system design and installation; to the technical assistance and system maintenance.
The SolarPipo team, currently composed of seven people, has a combined experience of over 8 years in the renewable energy sector, product development and management, sales and marketing, team-building skills. Its core has been at the helm of management of startups with a keen eye on innovation.
SolarPipo Finance BV was founded in April 2020. The majority of the shares belong to its Dutch shareholders, with a combined 60 years of experience with Rockstart having the most relevant experience in smart energy ventures and startups.
Dairy farmers’ cooperatives are a growing and very important business sector (10% of the economy) combined with the milk processing industries and transport needed to bring the cooled milk from the farms to the processors. Usually, the milk coolers use sizeable diesel generators for energy. SolarPipo has identified a list of 7 dairy farmers who cannot wait to stop using diesel generators consuming vast amounts of diesel (which can grow easily to significantly higher numbers). Also, there are at least 100 cooperatives on the list of potential customers but also numerous other parties in the dairy sector value chain.
The dairy industry in Uganda is one of the most promising in Africa. Increasing regional demand for dairy products means strong growth potential. The low productivity in many African countries, e.g. Nigeria, Ghana & Tanzania, has resulted in major imports from the EU and therefore increased potential for Uganda to serve regional demand. 20-40% of all milk production in Uganda is wasted due to a lack of timely cooling. Solar cooling technologies can provide consistent cold storage for areas with no or unreliable energy access, offering significant impact potential.
SolarPipo’s business model is based on sharing the benefits of solar systems with its customers (mainly dairy cooperatives). Without any need for investment from the end client, the promoter replaces diesel generators with solar power plants/batterie, owning the equipment during the first 5 years.
The switch to solar energy allows the cooperatives to reduce costs throughout the lifetime of the solar power plants (usually 15 to 20 years). The saved costs are then used to pay for the loan made to purchase the solar installations. The loan interest and the service fees are aligned with local practices, providing enough margin for a reasonable return on the investments made. Besides ensuring funding for the projects and handling the installation of the equipment, SolarPipo remains a close partner to the cooperatives during the first 5 years, answering customer questions, further optimizing the total installation, correcting faults, and optimizing usage with the gathered data. The volume of available projects in Uganda is large, making the growth potential high.
The target dairy farmers are a selection of over 130 Cooperative in the southwestern region of Uganda with an average size that ranges between 200-500 Cows. In the future, the company is planning on providing water pumps in the future following the same model.
SolarPipo believes in the power of alternative lending to extend access to funding for energy projects in Africa.
Active since
2020
Fiscal country
NL
Operating In
"Uganda"
Industry
Energy
Number of Goparity Loans
6
Women Shareholders
No
Website
https://www.solarpipo.com/2024-08-19
This project was settled by the promoter SolarPipo in 2022 for all its Goparity investors, but its outcomes and impact are still present in the cooperatives and their communities.
In total, the campaigns to fund the solar energy installation at six dairy cooperatives in rural Uganda have avoided the consumption of 30.000 litres diesel per year, which was used to run the generators needed to cool the production. This avoids the emission of 84 tonnes of CO2 per year into the atmosphere by replacing diesel fuel with renewable energy.
The projects also had important indirect impact in providing lighting for the area, which enables safer leisure and work activities around the solar plant, and increasing the cooperatives operation time, maintaining over 4.300 jobs at the farms, shops and processing plants, while reducing food waste caused by unstable energy supply.
You can see more of that impact in a video highlighting the projects’ stories, including new images from the promoter and the cooperatives.
2022-09-27
This project has successfully reached its payments plan maturity. All investors have received their full capital invested and interest. Nevertheless, its impact will keep growing for many more years!
2022-04-28
This loan has been restructured as following: introduction of 36 months extension to the project term.
2021-11-27
First instalment was paid to all the investors
2021-10-26
409 investors successfully raised 57.500€
2021-10-15
This campaign will help avoid the emission of 10 tons of CO2 per year