Posted in | News | LEDs | Lighting

Panasonic Donates Solar Lanterns to Indonesian Village Without Access to Electricity

Panasonic donated 110 solar lanterns and shades to the village of Sone, in West Timor, Indonesia, which has no access to electricity. The lanterns featured shades bearing animal designs that were submitted to an international design campaign called "Cut Out the Darkness." Villagers enjoyed a special moment when all the lights were turned on at once, making a "zoo of light" appeared before everyone's eyes.

[Video] Cut Out The Darkness / Lantern'zoo in Indonesia Flash Report
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uDOu7XoW6vs
[Photo] Flash Report: Cut Out the Darkness Lantern'zoo Donation in Indonesia
http://panasonic.net/sustainability/en/lantern/2015/02/cotd2.html
[Project Website] Cut Out the Darkness
http://cotd.panasonic.net/

Children read a book with a solar lantern. (Photo: Business Wire)

This donation was a part of Panasonic's fiscal 2014 (to end of March 2015) activities for its "100 Thousand Solar Lanterns Project," in which a total of 100,000 solar lanterns will be donated to off-grid communities around the world by 2018. That year happens to be the hundredth anniversary since Panasonic was founded.

In hopes of getting more people to know about the challenges faced by people who live without access to electricity, the "Cut Out the Darkness" project invites people to participate by personally designing shades for the lanterns. Selected designs are then turned into actual shades and donated together with solar lanterns to homes and schools in areas without electricity. For the first round, 111 designed shades and solar lanterns were donated to Sumba Island in Indonesia in March 2014.

For the second round, Panasonic called for design submissions with animal motifs. Thanks to collaboration from the Behance Japan Tokyo Community, an online portfolio for artists and designers, Panasonic received more than 300 designs from around the world.

This time, 110 pairs of solar lanterns and shades with designs chosen by popular online vote were donated to the village of Sone in East Nusa Tenggara, Indonesia. When all the lanterns were switched on at once by villagers during the donation ceremony, a "zoo of light" appeared from the darkness, before everyone's eyes. Information summarizing the project will soon be released on the project website.

This is the second year Panasonic made donations to Indonesia in its "100 Thousand Solar Lanterns Project." Panasonic donated 1,000 solar lanterns in March 2014 and a Panasonic-sponsored Japanese famous football team named GAMBA Osaka donated ten solar lanterns in January 2015 to Sumba Island and Sabu Island. In February 2015, 1,010 solar lanterns (including those donated through "Cut Out the Darkness") were delivered to the Institute of Business and Economic Democracy Foundation (IBEKA), an NGO that supports communities by introducing renewable energy, and to Kopernik, an NGO that delivers innovative technology and products to communities in the developing world with the greatest need. Thus a grand total of over 2,000 have been donated so far to Indonesia.

Currently, about 1.3 billion people live without access to electricity worldwide. Homes in these regions commonly use kerosene lamps for lighting, but the fire and smoke from these lamps pose serious fire and health risks. Panasonic solar lanterns can be used as lighting at night, thanks to the battery, which stores energy generated by sunlight during the daytime. The lanterns also reduce the inherent danger of fire from kerosene lamps, as well as health hazards from smoke, and CO2 emissions. Solar lanterns are expected to solve some of the challenges faced by areas that have no access to electricity.

The "100 Thousand Solar Lanterns Project" utilizes Panasonic's technologies and products to help solve social challenges in emerging and developing countries that have poor electrical power conditions, by making donations to non-profit/non-governmental, humanitarian, and international organizations. For Asia, Panasonic expanded its list of recipient countries this fiscal year to include Malaysia, in addition to Indonesia, Cambodia, Myanmar, India and the Philippines, which previously received lanterns.

Panasonic plans to continue working on the "100 Thousand Solar Lanterns Project" as part of its efforts to pursue "A Better Life, A Better World" and to contribute to the achievement of the United Nations Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

Tell Us What You Think

Do you have a review, update or anything you would like to add to this news story?

Leave your feedback
Your comment type
Submit

While we only use edited and approved content for Azthena answers, it may on occasions provide incorrect responses. Please confirm any data provided with the related suppliers or authors. We do not provide medical advice, if you search for medical information you must always consult a medical professional before acting on any information provided.

Your questions, but not your email details will be shared with OpenAI and retained for 30 days in accordance with their privacy principles.

Please do not ask questions that use sensitive or confidential information.

Read the full Terms & Conditions.