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The human scale solar tech created to support people locally. The human scale solar tech created to support people locally.

Lytefire

People make the change. It cannot come from technology only. To make sustainable changes happen in energy we work with everybody, NGOs, DIYers, schools, artisans, ... and you.

1 Humanitarian

We provide hardware and training to create sustainable jobs. We do it for our humanitarian clients to reinforce the local economy and livelihoods, to protect forests and improve the air quality.

How we create jobs →

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2 Do-it-Yourself

Build your own direct solar energy access with the Lytefire construction guides.

How you can Do-It-Yourself →

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Our Products

Solar Oven and Community Cooker

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See products →

Our Users

All across the world

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Go to full globe →

We are

An impact-oriented company:

pressarticles372in FinlandEST.2012saved per yearper Solar Oventons of CO217communitymembers340unitsinstalled172 projectcountries25
pressarticles372in FinlandEST.2012saved per yearper Solar Oventons of CO217communitymembers340unitsinstalled172 projectcountries25
Our Impact →

Trusted by

Major NGOs and impact organizations around the world

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All our clients →

 

Lytefire’s Users: What They Say

Real users

Joan Arwa Ogwang
Joan Arwa Ogwang, Kenya
Solar Fire Bakery Founder
Entrepreneur

"When the sun rises and the sky is blue, I am sure it’s a good baking day. Our demand rose to 40kg a day and it’s impressive to see how well the Lytefire can handle this. It’s a joy for me and my bakers to bake tray after tray with solar."

Prudence Vasta, Uganda
Prudence Vasta, Uganda
Chief Baker at Nebbi Smart Up Solar Bakery and Farmer
Started in 2022 with one Lytefire oven after a training

"Receiving the Lytefire Solar oven has improved our lives. We are glad to testify the beauty in using solar energy because it’s cheap, user friendly and we no longer spend money on electricity or charcoal."

Robert Freling
Robert Freling, USA
Executive Director at SELF - Solar Electric Light Fund
Initiated and oversaw our women's empowerment project with SELF in Uganda

"Throughout the process, Lytefire proved itself as an innovative, resourceful, and thoughtful partner in Uganda. They offer an impressive product, and back it with in-depth knowledge and supportive staff. The Lytefire units have a triple impact of fighting climate change, enhancing food security, and supporting rural entrepreneurship. This technology has great potential to help the world. I am pleased to recommend Lytefire."

Christina Nyback
Christina Nyback, Finland
International Programme Director at World Vision Finland
Oversees our projects with World Vision in East Africa

"Such a great example of sustainable innovation supporting local entrepreneurship, livelihoods, and school meals. Thank you for the inspiring initiative and for the important collaboration, Lytefire!"

Show 41 more testimonials
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Free energy

Delicious food!

Baking and cooking with direct solar energy doesn’t change the taste of food. Same quality, but with solar energy. It is also possibe to do food canning, baking, roasting, and cooking.

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Can you see how simple and powerful this is? About the tech →

 

Human scale

“ With this solar fire, no need for electricity and no need to burn anything anymore. The mirrors concentrate the sunlight directly. Oh and if you are wondering why there are no PV, no batteries, no rare earth metals, it is because in many places simplicity is the best approach to support people locally.” — Eva and Urs, co-founders Lytefire

Tech: how does this works →

 

 

Latest Press

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The Latest from Lytefire

Signup here for our newsletter. It’s sent more or less once a month and it’s loaded with positive project’s news.

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BLOG  ·  yesterday
Time to check on our journey! 

Step one was to test and try our ideas about a direct solar economy, meaning how can the use of direct sunshine impact the economy positively. It’s a multi-factorial impact:  Environment preservation (no more wood burning) Health protection (no more breathing in&nbsp;(…)
Building the Direct Solar Economy

Time to check on our journey!

Step one was to test and try our ideas about a direct solar economy, meaning how can the use of direct sunshine impact the economy positively. It’s a multi-factorial impact:

  • Environment preservation (no more wood burning)
  • Health protection (no more breathing in of lethal dark particles)
  • Women empowerment (no more hours gathering wood and watching the fire)
  • Wealth creation (a powerful and steady energy source can power business)

At that point we praise solar cooking and we wanted to go a bit beyond that, to bring the spirit into commercial activities such as baking for example. So at first, we worked in Kenya in partnership with Weconomy, World Vision Finland and World Vision Kenya. This was in 2016 and we have documented the very first and successful production of solar bread and solar peanut butter.



In 2017-2018, a strategic partnership with Autodesk and Wärtislä allowed us to train and empower 54 entrepreneurs in 9 projects in Kenya and Tanzania. We observed, we documented what works, what doesn’t.



This lead to the opening of a very nice solar bakery led by women in Tanzania.

These projects created with our humanitarian partners and clients have set the basis of a direct solar economy where artisans and entrepreneurs adapted their work to the availability of the solar energy source. And that’s not a small thing to do as you can imagine.

In France, the successful solar bakery Neoloco started in 2020, has attracted lots of attention and is invited to share at many universities about their specific solar work organization. This great example is inspiring to many.

Fast forward to 2025, the Solar Fire Bakery created in 2022 in Kisumu, Kenya, was awarded the Prix Afrique Excellence. It is Africa’s first solar bakery, and it’s powered by a Lytefire.

"The second prize awarded to the solar bakery recognizes a project requiring very little capital, using updated techniques for baking bread through concentrated solar power. It meets the requirements of sustainability and accessibility, is highly replicable across all regions, and is a reliable way to stabilize and retain local populations, as the bakery serves as a hub of social activity."

That same year, another strategic partnership with the Jansen PrimeSteps Foundation, allowed us to focus more on incubation while supporting the start of several solar bakeries.

These are the seeds of an emerging direct solar economy that is now starting everywhere, with users from Kenya to France, from Uganda to Senegal.

Post #718 25 March 2026   ·  Blog
BLOG  ·  27 November 2025
Another solar baking oven installed by STEM Synergy partner and licensee in Ethiopia! Congratulations. 

Empowering Communities Through Solar Technology is one of the motivations of STEM Synergy. In collaboration with a dedicated group from Wolaita now living in the U.S., their team has&nbsp;(…)
Another Lytefire with STEM Synergy

Another solar baking oven installed by STEM Synergy partner and licensee in Ethiopia! Congratulations.

Empowering Communities Through Solar Technology is one of the motivations of STEM Synergy. In collaboration with a dedicated group from Wolaita now living in the U.S., their team has installed its 4th solar-powered bakery in Bitena Town, Dugna Fango Woreda.

These clean energy bakeries are transforming lives, lowering costs, boosting productivity, and creating sustainable jobs for women and youth.

Post #693 27 November 2025   ·  Blog
BLOG  ·  10 November 2025
For more than a decade Lytefire has tackled the energy, climate and poverty crisis by spreading sustainable solar tech and training. We’ve been able to create jobs where resources are few, reduce emissions while growing the local economy, and for us this has also brought new hope that yes,&nbsp;(…)
Moving from Training Solar Entrepreneurs to Incubating Them with Lytefire

For more than a decade Lytefire has tackled the energy, climate and poverty crisis by spreading sustainable solar tech and training. We’ve been able to create jobs where resources are few, reduce emissions while growing the local economy, and for us this has also brought new hope that yes, people can be empowered, we can do things differently, we can make change possible. At the same time, as an impact company we are always critical and looking to improve - and this is why we are excited to shift from the training approach to the incubation approach. What’s our thinking behind that?

The real solar entrepreneur doing the work, Moricho, Kenya 2025

 

You get what you measure

“The project has trained 100 people in solar…” – It’s great when we read this, but what do we actually know about how many of the trainees actually make use of their training? For us at Lytefire it means asking ourselves how many solar entrepreneurs who trained in running their own sustainable bakery actually run one.

When looking deeper into this, it quickly becomes clear that the number of people trained is not a good indicator of the actual impact.

For us this means two things:

  1. We shouldn’t design projects to train the maximum number of people, and
  2. We should design projects to support people in their whole impact journey.

We have been running solar training activities with major NGOs, UN organizations and a myriad of locally rooted organizations across Africa and beyond. We know that the success of a solar bakery depends immensely on the local ingenuity and motivation of the entrepreneurs, and that when done right, Lytefire can yield carbon reductions, cost savings and a competitive advantage in the market place by reducing the price of bread or giving entrepreneurs a better margin.

But often the challenges are not related to the product and technology, but rather challenges in the day-to-day operation, the administration, with permits, the workforce, political instability, etc.

 

Let’s incubate

This is why we are excited to start a new type of project, with the support of Jansen PrimeSteps Foundation, to incubate – not train – solar entrepreneurs. It means we are able to take a different approach from the trainings we normally deliver:

  • Not everything needs to be delivered in the short training phase
  • Challenges can be tackled as they arise after the training phase (in the incubation phase)
  • Resources can be allocated to supporting, re-training, change-management, trouble shooting
  • With the hands-on approach we can learn and help solve the other challenges around starting a (solar) job.

With the project we are able to launch several new solar bakeries, but we are also able to provide incubation support to already trained groups. In Kenya, we work with Joan Arwa, entrepreneur owner of the Solar Fire Bakery in Kisumu and trainer. She was recently awarded with the Africa Excellence Prize from France.

One such group is the Kormei Bakery in Sego, Kenya. The group was initially trained and equipped on behalf of World Vision. The training showed immediate uptake and the bakery has been running ever since at a high output. As a result, Sego has become a very interesting case study candidate for us. Through incubation we can follow their progress more hands-on, and also help the bakery not get bogged down with administrative, staff or other issues that may arise as the bakery grows and faces new challenges.

As we are in the implementation of this new incubator approach we cannot share yet about the successes and challenges of the entrepreneurs and our program yet – but we can be sure that being closer to our end users and having the resources to support them with incubation is a good thing!

We also welcome other organizations, as well as clients and financiers in the impact industry to shift their project implementation goals to build long-term projects that take responsibility to create impact over time. We also think that shifting from metrics like people trained to jobs created or income generated is an important perspective change.

So, we will soon share more about the outcome of this incubation approach.

Are you interested in solar incubation? Schedule a meeting with us.

Post #691 10 November 2025   ·  Blog
BLOG  ·  2 September 2025
All units have safely arrived in Senegal for this project led by Association Adscal, the training with our friend Michel was short but great, Isma and Abou provided fantastic guidance and now the first solar and charcoal tests are starting. 

 

The bakers are working very well with their solar&nbsp;(…)
First breads and cakes in Agnam Lidoubé, Senegal

All units have safely arrived in Senegal for this project led by Association Adscal, the training with our friend Michel was short but great, Isma and Abou provided fantastic guidance and now the first solar and charcoal tests are starting.

The bakers are working very well with their solar ovens to bake nice baguettes!

Nice baguettes, delicious cookies. The mamma’s are happy and so are we.

Post #690 2 September 2025   ·  Blog
BLOG  ·  1 August 2025
La boulangerie solaire Solar Fire Bakery au Kenya s’est vue attribuer le deuxième Prix Afrique Excellence. 

Joan Ogwang Arwa et son équipe sont primés ainsi que nous à Lytefire qui l’avons beaucoup soutenue depuis la création il y a 5 ans (déjà !), notamment Eva Wissenz, Urs Riggenbach et&nbsp;(…)
Récompense du Prix Afrique Excellence pour la boulangerie solaire au Kenya

La boulangerie solaire Solar Fire Bakery au Kenya s’est vue attribuer le deuxième Prix Afrique Excellence.

Joan Ogwang Arwa et son équipe sont primés ainsi que nous à Lytefire qui l’avons beaucoup soutenue depuis la création il y a 5 ans (déjà !), notamment Eva Wissenz, Urs Riggenbach et Muriel Fuhrer.

Le but de ce prix porté par une association créée en France par Mr Christian Teyssonnière de Gramont, est de mettre en avant des talents et des solutions réellement adaptés au contexte des pays d’Afrique. Il s’agit d’identifier des innovations, des pratiques et des modèles pouvant être mis à l’échelle et qui renforcent l’économie locale de manière soutenable pour les gens et leur environnement. Chacun des trois gagnants reçoit une dotation.

Avec Joan comme boulangère en chef, Cheryl et son équipe d’assistants boulangers et de vendeurs, Joan a récemment obtenu la certification KEBS du Bureau Kenyan de régulation, qui lui donne accès à davantage de marchés, comme les écoles, les hôpitaux, etc.

Joan a récemment ouvert une boutique et l’a repeinte à neuf il y a peu. Grâce au soutien financier du Prix Afrique Excellence, elle pourra investir dans une meilleure solution de transport.

Nous espérons voir de plus en plus de femmes africaines comme Joan gagner leur autonomie avec des projets d’artisanat solaire nourricier.

68 superbes projets ont été proposés cette année et on espère qu’il y en aura encore beaucoup l’année prochaine.

Nous sommes vraiment très heureux de cette reconnaissance.

Le site du Prix Afrique Excellence.

Post #686 1 August 2025   ·  Blog
BLOG  ·  25 June 2025
We are happy and honored to start a new project in East Africa with the trust and support of Jansen PrimeSteps Foundation. The foundation is focused on poverty alleviation through entrepreneurship, and with this new project PrimeSteps is going to help us elevate our work and increase our impact&nbsp;(…)
6 solar bakeries in Kenya with Jansen PrimeSteps Foundation

We are happy and honored to start a new project in East Africa with the trust and support of Jansen PrimeSteps Foundation. The foundation is focused on poverty alleviation through entrepreneurship, and with this new project PrimeSteps is going to help us elevate our work and increase our impact in Kenya, and if possible in Uganda as well.

A few years ago, the Foundation already supported the empowerment of women’s groups in Burkina Faso. In this beautiful but vulnerable country, women and youth, in particular, lack livelihood opportunities and access to energy. The project provided several Lytefire solar ovens, and the users received appropriate training. With this new cooperation, the goal is to go further and incubate six small-scale solar businesses in Kenya to be profitable job creators and suppliers of affordable baked goods in their communities.

We will provide our usual training that covers the technical aspects of the technology (use, maintenance, safety) and the basis of entrepreneurship training will cover stock management, accounting, customer acquisition, among the many other topics, to enable each group to succeed as independent entrepreneurs. For the best success of the entrepreneurs, the project will also provide incubation support beyond the initial training, to troubleshoot any entrepreneurial challenges during the startup phase. We believe this incubator approach is more and more the way Lytefire will structure our impact-oriented work.

As an impact company, at Lytefire we are focused on delivering sustainable equipment to create new income opportunities and empower populations in vulnerable countries. Our team offers innovative training programs that help start local businesses or promote the transfer of technological know-how to vocational schools. Every Lytefire installed can protect 651 m² of forest each year from being cut down for fuel. Learn more about our impact here and about our educational work here.

Image credit: Jansen PrimeSteps Foundation's website.
Post #683 25 June 2025   ·  Blog
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