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Meet the pioneers

Courageous people are pioneering a brand new local economy. They are solar artisans and they work with one or several Lytefires. In a time of global warming and energy crisis, they contribute to a better future.

On this page: Globe · Entrepreneurs · Humanitarian · DIY

ARTISANS

Solar entrepreneurs

© Lytefire
© Lytefire
© Lytefire
© Lytefire
© Joan Arwa
© Joan Arwa

Solar Fire Bakery, Kenya

→ Awarded with the Afrique Excellence Prize in 2025

Joan Arwa Ogwang is using 2 Lytefire Pro. She started to test her activity in 2021 and since then she grew the Solar Fire Bakery in Kisumu. With several bakers and salesperson, she is able to offer solar baked bread, cookies and buns to regular customers. In 2024, she opened a second shop in the same area. Joan is also working with us as trainer and project manager to help create sustainable bakeries in East Africa. She is, to our knwoledge, the first woman solar entrepreneur in Kenya and we have been happy to support her installation in 2022.

→ Visit the Instagram page

Conserverie Fourmi, France

Conserverie Fourmi opened its doors in 2024. Created by Manon Robert and Quentin Feutren near Rennes, France, they use the Lytefire to make their energy mix more sustainable. The company offers workshops for individuals and a solar food conservation processing service for professionals. Their wish? "To explore new ways of preserving plant food to strengthen local organic production chains and empower men and women to preserve seasonal fruits and vegetables in a resource-efficient manner, serving the food resilience of the region."

→ Visit their site

© Nebbi
© Solar Bakery Nebbi Uganda
© Solar Bakery Nebbi Uganda
© Solar Bakery Nebbi Uganda

Smart Up Solar Bakery Nebbi, Uganda

After a training organized by Plan International and our team, Prudence Yoo Acel Ladegi, Benedict Bithola and friends were so passionate about baking with the Lytefire that they kept going with learning and marketing their recipes. At Smart Up Solar Bakery, they bake 4 times a week. People like the products and sometimes come from miles away to buy their bread or order occasion’s cakes to Smart Up Solar Bakery Nebbi.

→ Great update from 2025

→ Visit the Facebook page

© L’écho / Barasol
© Denis Roisil
© Denis Roisil
© Ouest France / Barasol

Barasol bakery, France

After 30 years working as a professional baker in Lyon, he created Barasol in 2023 ("Bar" means "bread" in the Breton language). He bakes with wood when the weather is bad and with solar every day of good weather (around 3-4 months / year), for a small batch. He sells breads and biscuits in his village and in two large markets, in Paimpol and Binic. He doesn’t bring his Lytefire Deluxe on trailer to the market yet, but it’s an option for the future. He also makes pizzas once a week. Denis works with ancient wheat flours and is passionate about developing new doughs that are more tolerant to temperature changes.
→ No site, no social media

© Aurinko
© Aurinko
© Aurinko duo (c) Frédérique Berlic for L Independant
© Aurinko
© Aurinko

Aurinko, France

In the Pyrenees mountains, in Targasonne (Cerdagne), at 1700m above the sea level, Quentin Mercier and Caroline Penacq created Aurinko (meaning “Sun” in Finnish) with a Lytefire Deluxe Oven + Roaster. To launch their activity, they organized a crowdfunding campaign. Since summer 2023, they specialized in solar roasted seeds that they are selling on local marketplaces and restaurants.
→ Visit the site

© Du Soleil et des Graines
© Du Soleil et des Graines
© Du Soleil et des Graines
© Du Soleil et des Graines
© Du Soleil et des Graines
© Du Soleil et des Graines
© Du Soleil et des Graines
© Du Soleil et des Graines

Du Soleil et des Graines, France

Since 2021, Lydiane et Manu are running Du Soleil et des Graines, their local activity in Bourg Argental. They have been among the very first to follow NeoLoco’s model in France. With their Lytefire Deluxe Oven + Roaster, they are offering a great set of sweet and salted roasted seeds products. They also organize training days at their place.
→ Visit the site

© Emma Prodosci
© Neoloco
© Neoloco
© Neoloco
© Neoloco
© Neoloco
© Neoloco, Emma Prodosci
© Neoloco

NeoLoco, France

Based in Normandy, with NeoLoco, Arnaud Crétot is the first solar bakery in Europe with 30% of bread production baked with solar. With roasting, the performances are much higher. Since 2019, Arnaud has been using Lytefire Deluxe Oven + Roaster and then Lytefire Deluxe Big Oven + Roaster to bake nutritious sourdough bread, and to roast seeds and nuts to create fake coffee, muësli and energy bars. To start his activity, he has done a crowdfunding campaign. 4 people are working at NeoLoco, the bread is sold in 8 shops and the solar roasted goods in 80. Arnaud is an engineer at first and he has developped several tools supporting the energy transition.

→ Visit the site

© Brasserie Hélie
© Brasserie Hélie
© Brasserie Hélie
© Brasserie Hélie
© Brasserie Hélie

Hélie Microbrewery, France

Micro-brasserie Hélie opened its doors in 2023 and organized a successful crowdfunding (here). Created by Romain Zamboni near Montbéliard, it is a strong example of real circular economy. Hélie’s beers use local ingredients. The beer is certified organic and brewed using solar energy, using a solar concentrator Lytefire DIY Stove built and thermal solar panels. Romain is Europe’s first solar brewer. The bottles are reusable,and manufacturing waste is limited as much as possible, some of it being recycled for animal feed. The water needed for cooling is reused in the manufacturing circuit. After 2 years of activity, Romain needs to increase his production and therefor he is switching to a new solar system.
→ Visit the site

A rural solar bakery in Tanzania

Tujijenge is a women community group that is producing both dehydrated fish and baked goods. They also engage in roasting peanuts and baked sweet potatoes. Before a project with them, every month they spent about $400 in charcoal expenses, and we were happy to see that the Lytefire has been making a big financial difference. Monica Matcha is the lead person and listening to her team’s experience is enlightening.

© Brin de Levain
© Brin de Levain
© Brin de Levain

Brin de Levain bakery, France

As a rural baker in the Drôme region since 2021, Vincent Reynaud bakes organic sourdough bread using a long fermentation at room temperature for Brin de Levain. A light manual kneading guarantees more digestible gluten, and above all great preservation, for a minimum of 7 days. Rich in aroma, less salty, with low glycemic index, there is everything here to keep you healthy while enjoying yourself! Vincent got his Lytefire Deluxe Oven + Roaster in 2023 and he bakes 3-4 batches of 12 loaves per week, 2 days / week. His bread being delicious, he has now too many orders! The oven being no longer big enough, he will use his Lytefire as a back-up oven for baking and also mostly for making cookies and roasting.
→ Visit the Facebook page

© L’Atelier Bélénos
© L’Atelier Bélénos
© L’Atelier Bélénos
© L’Atelier Bélénos

Atelier Bélénos, France

Didier Ménard runs l’Atelier Bélénos in France, near Rennes. He is roasting seeds and creates energy bars wiht his Lytefire Deluxe Oven + Roaster. His innovative spirit was awarded in 2023 with a local “Eco-Défis” (Eco-Challenges) from the Chambre des Métiers et de l’Artisanat.
→ Visit the site

Au Soleil Levain, France

Professional baker, seasoned builder and sustainability enthusiast, Sébastien decided to take the plunge and open his own bakery in the small village of Brusquet, near Digne, France. Supported by a solid network, a crowdfunding campaign led by Hélène, his partner, and an EU-grant, the project was launched successfully very quickly. Au Soleil Levain is located in a magnificent landscap and the bakery building was built using sustainable construction methods. Business started is August 2024 with a focus on biscuits with his solar oven.

→ See their Insta account

L’Epi Nature, France

Florence and Michel own L’Epi Nature, their bakery in Epuisay (West France). They use their solar oven from time to time to promote solar baking and resilience in the region.

→ See their Facebook account

Au Pain Solaire, France

Daphnée is setting up Au Pain Solaire, a solar bakery business at the Galaxi farm in Loroux Bottereau (Loire-Atlantique, France). The small solar bakery will complement the production of flour and goat cheese at the farm and in different farmer’s markets all around.

→ See their Facebook account

© Idée d’en faire
© Idée d’en faire
© Idée d’en faire
© Idée d’en faire
© Idée d’en faire

Idée d’en Faire, France

Since many years, Michel Mouillé started his Idée d’en faire in Vendée to present different solar cooking solutions to a large audience. This structure is a limited liability company with ESUS certification (Entreprise Solidaire d’Utilité Sociale). He also organizes training to spread low technologies. He takes his Lytefire Deluxe Oven + Roaster to many festivals in France and is always ready to share his passion.

Heuberge Mountain Resort, Switzerland

We have started a cooperation with Heuberge Resort family resort based in the Swiss Alps in 2020. We have been building for them a Lytefire DIY Oven (all in wood!) as well as several high tech solar saunas using Lytefire solar concentration system. We hope they will be an inspirational example for the other mountain resorts suffering more and more from global warming.
→ Visit the site

TDYAN-YOVANU, Uganda

After a project with Plan International Uganda and Plan International Finland in 2021-2022, the Tororo District Youth Advocay Network (TDYAN-YOVANU) continued to use their Lytefire Oven and have a few clients. They are a Community Based Organization.

Lougsi’s rural bakery, Burkina-Faso

The 105 women of Lougsi village, situated 30km away from Ouagadougou, have been supported by the local association SOS Energie, our team and Jansen Primesteps Foundation to get a solar oven. After 2 years, 15 of them that have been trained to solar baking and are using their Lytefire in order to produce bread 5 days a week and sell it all around. They no longer buy wood and coal and the solar oven allows them to save 750 to 1000 CFA per day (entre 1 et 2 Euros), which is significant in this tough rural context.

David Chepkwone, Kenya

It was an exciting moment when David pulled out the first batch of freshly baked muffins from his Lytefire Oven in 2016, for a project with World Vision in Kenya. After that, David used the oven daily for years before moving on to new adventures. When we met, David was baking with an electric oven but the grid was so bad that he couldn’t develop the business properly. When the power was out he couldn’t bake, and with charcoal his product would be low-quality and his profit margins would be slim. With the launch of his solar bakery, David has been able to reduce his fuel costs and increase his output! The shiny Lytefire also attracted many visitors to the rural bakery, and so he decided to open up a small cafe to sell snacks and beverages to the interested crowd. With a clean energy source adapted to his needs, David had the opportunity to be a creative and productive baker as long as he wanted to. His enthusiasm has been such a great inspiration for the team!

© Sole B’Rayon
© Solé B’Rayon
© Sole B’Rayon
© Sole B’Rayon
© Sole B’Rayon

Solé B’Rayon, France

Based in Normandy, in Pays de Bray, Céline Puech launched Solé B’Rayon in 2022 with a Lytefire Deluxe Oven + Roaster. Céline has matured her project for a long time but she was very close to NeoLoco and the market turned out to not be enough in the end. She terminated the activity in 2024 and sold the solar oven to Manoir de Kerlotech for coffee experiment with Lobodis. She has selling roasted seeds, herbal salts, crumbs for deep fry recipes and also energy bars, all prepared with direct solar heat.
→ Visit the site

© Le Comptoir d’Hélios
© Le Comptoir d’Hélios
© Le Comptoir d’Hélios
© Le Comptoir d’Hélios
© Le Comptoir d’Hélios
© Le Comptoir d’Hélios

Le Comptoir d’Hélios, France

Luc Fournaux is the manager of a touristic activity in South France. Motivated by his son, he purchased the very first industrial Lytefire Deluxe Oven + Roaster in 2021, convinced by the enormous potential of this type of equipment in his sunny region. With Le Comptoir d’Hélios, he sold his seeds to his outdoor activities customers as well as in farmers markets of the region. But running several activities simultaneously wasn’t an easy task, and after 2 years he took a different path, selling his Lytefire to Aurinko.
→ Visit the site

© Lug
© Lug
© Lug

Lug, France

Michel Mouillé is using Lytefire Deluxe Oven + Roaster to create a “fake” coffee based on local grains and beans in Vendée, West France. LUG, his micro-company, refers to the Celtic sun deity and it started in 2022 and stopped in 2024.
→ Visit the Facebook page

© Bruzhun
© Bruzhun

Bruzhun, France

Biscuits, roasted seeds and “bean to bar” chocolate, this was Bruzhun (meaning “crumbs’’ in the Breton language) project with the Lytefire Deluxe Oven + Roaster in 2023. For their chocolate, the team has been mastering the process in house from A to Z with no sugar added. They terminated in 2024 and resold their solar oven to Ekopratik.

© Au gré du soleil
© Au gré du soleil

Au Gré du Soleil, France

Graduated as baker in 2022, Violaine decided to create the Au Gré du Soleil bakery in her region. Initially tempted by the Lytefire Deluxe on a trailer, she wanted to move it only a few times per year to bring it from her home to a family plot. She finally turned to self-construction supported by Artisan Grégoire and the LowTech Lab in Grenoble. She carried out her crowdfunding campaign and, she realized that if necessary, her Lytefire without a trailer could be easily dismantled and stored in a small van. Consistency and respect for nature are strong values for Violaine. She is starting her bakery in 2024 and she will operate on direct orders and a few markets with her sourdough breads that are made the most local possible.
→ No site, no social media

Neoloco, France

In France with NeoLoco solar bakery since 2018

Since Arnaud Crétot, a French engineer based in France, joined the Solar Fire team in 2014 after his studies and the creation of the Energy Vagabonds with a friend. This association is promoting soft and clean energy and the new team uses the Lytefire oven to introduce Concentrated Solar Power to schools.

Arnaud has been at the forefront of innovation. Through many projects with local partners, Arnaud participated in the development of Lytefire’s and analysed our data. He followed closely the implementation of the first ovens and roasters in East Africa with great results (read What they say).

To understand better the needs of the users, Arnaud became... a baker artisan. He took a training in baking and started his own bakery in Normandy, France, and that’s how NeoLoco was created. Arnaud’s bread is baked with locally sourced ingredients, using sour dough for better conversation. He also makes snacks with solar grilled seeds and a local coffee. This approach allows him to have a direct impact in Normandy and to understand very precisely the challenges of Lytefire’s daily users. His feedbacks about baking and using organic yeast have been extremely important to create our educational trainings. and upgrade the technology with CPM-Industries and start the production for the French market.

NeoLoco is now a well established local activity and Arnaud’s example inspires others in France to become "solarpreneurs". Check them on our dedicated Lytefire page!

Right from the beginning, NeoLoco has been featured in several media and gained more and more visibility among the French and international media. Arnaud is a great example for the new generation of "solarpreneurs"!

This video presents his activity (English subtitles) and his model:

(picture (c) E. Prodosci)

Show less

HUMANITARIAN

Projects with our NGO clients and impact partners

Six solar bakeries in Kenya and Uganda with Jansen PrimeSteps Foundation

In this project, started in 2025, we have been equipping, training and incubating 6 solar bakeries in East Africa thanks to the support form Jansen PrimeSteps Foundation, focusing on our joint goal of poverty alleviation through entrepreneurship.

→ Check the blog post

In Angola with UNDP

We are very happy to share with you that we are starting three exciting projects with UNDP (United Nations Development Program) in Africa.

→ Check the blog post

Continuation in Kenya with World Vision

3rd project in Kenya with World Vision in 2025

Joan Arwa is successfully running her solar bakery in Kisumu, Kenya (here). Not far from there, in Sego, she recently trained a great group supported by World Vision for the Noswet program. The group members have known each other for years and are very appreciated in the community.

→ Check the blog post

With Elevate Africa in Mozambique

The local association Elevate Africa Mozambique installed their Lytefire Oven in 2024. The plan is to start a solar powered bakery to support their youth center by reducing energy costs, creating additional income and sustainable jobs! The project was made possible with the support from the Swiss association Wungana Mozambique who visited the training center a few weeks after the installation. They shared the pictures with us and we could see that despite the complex and tense political context in this country, people are happily baking solar "pao" bread!

In Madagascar with NEA Energie

NEA Energie is a renewable energy company based in Madagascar. They install solar systems for industrial and private customers.

As part of their RSE projects for 2023, they have installed two solar ovens in two isolated villages in order to support circular economy. The remote assistance to the installation went well and the first solar bread baking have been a real success.

In Senegal with ADSCAL

It is in the village of Agnam Lidoubé, in Senegal, that four solar ovens are installed thanks to Adscal association and especially thanks to the extraordinary persistence of Mr Mouhamadou Touré. The ovens will improve greatly the village’s daily life.

Three ovens are going to equip existing bakeries. One will go to a group of skilled women baking biscuits and cakes. The women are in charge of a magnificent garden.

→ Check the blog post

In Guinea-Bissau with SWISSAID

It is in 3 locations in Guinea-Bissau that we have installed new Lytefire ovens and the equipment for the kitchens. The villages benefiting from this SWISSAID support are Bafata, Cacheu, and Oio.

This project was a bit stressful because the rainy season was about to start and everything had to be rushed to install the equipment and make the first tests. Sometimes, the weather wasn’t that great at all to bake with the sunlight. We are all patiently waiting for a better forecast in a few months now. During that time, the villages will be able to decide for the best usage of their solar ovens.

STEM Synergy, Ethiopia

STEM Synergy has excellent records of technical and educational expertise in Ehtiopia. It is an US-Ethiopian NGO, focused on empowering youths and women through practical education, sustainable local solutions and entrepreneurship. Since 2022, they are a licensee and we appreciate their motivation in commercializing Lytefire in their country
→ Visit the site
→ Cooperation

With Jansen PrimeSteps Foundation

A sponsor for Burkina-Faso in 2022-2023
We are proud to announce the start of our cooperation with the Swiss based Jansen PrimeSteps Foundation. With the support and advise of the PrimeSteps team we will equip and train entrepreneurs with Lytefire solar ovens across different locations in Burkina, with a focus on women’s groups and cooperatives.

Jannsen PrimeSteps is a Swiss non-profit foundation supporting solutions to improve people’s quality of life. Across sectors and countries, they identify the best solutions and provide know-how and financial support to scale-up projects with a large impact potential. We are really excited and honored by their support!

This project allows us to target specifically small women groups, who are not involved in bigger institutions or supported by larger organizations. By empowering these groups with the Lytefire technology and with the skills to run their own solar business, they can create their own income, become more independent, reduce their use of fossil fuels, protect their health and improve their quality of life - with Lytefire and solar entrepreneurship. We look forward to update on the project’s progress.

More information about our Project and Jansen PrimeSteps Foundation: https://www.primesteps.ch/projekt-im-detail/solar-fire-concentration/

In Nasséré, Burkina Faso

With French association Tora Coeur de Caux
Tora de Caux is a small French association based in Normandy, France. It is active since years in Burkina-Faso, in the Bam region. In particular, the team supports rural life in Nasséré through various actions managed by a project manager based in Ouagadougou.

With the aim of offering young people prospects for social and economic integration other than working at the mine, Tora Cœur de Caux has already equipped and provided local craftsmen with a sewing workshop, a solar pump and its garden. micro irrigated and a hair salon powered by solar energy. A solar bakery is a natural continuation of the work of the association.

With a Lytefire, the goals for the Kongoussi’s villagers, in the Nasséré region, is to prevent deforestation, increase the energy security of the village, receive a training in baking and maintenance of the Lytefire 6 oven, and to contribute to the financial independence of beneficiaries. It is important for this group to welcome and train young people who have dropped out of school. Thanks to Martin Pouabijie, the training went very well and the villagers could start their bakery with at least 6 production batches, i.e. 4 kg of dough / batch; about 24 kg of bread per day when the sky is clear.

Tora Coeur de Caux has its webpage here.

Empowering victims of rape in Uganda

With Solar Electric Fund and Rape Hurts Foundation
We are very happy and humbled to announce a new partnership starting with SELF and RHF who are joining forces to empower victims of rape in 2022 and 2023.

SELF - Solar Electric Light Fund - is a US based NGO financing this project to support Rape Hurts Foundation, created by Hellen Lunkuse W. Tanyinga after a traumatic experience. Even if SELF is primarily focused on electrification, they understand the huge need for direct heat and are happy to support the implementation of Lytefire in Uganda with us. It is in Jinja and Kamuli that the 5 Lytefire units and solar trainings are implemented, to allow young women to embrace a new path in life by becoming "solarpreneurs" (solar entrepreurs using Lytefire).

SELF’s website can be found here, and RHF here.

Check here the results on this project in 2024.

More info to come during project’s implementation.

Refugee camp in Sudan

For Alagaya refugee camp in the White Nile region with Plan International
We are happy to share that good news: we won our first tender and we’re starting soon in Sudan.

This projected is implemented in Alagaya refugee camp in the White Nile region with Plan International and it is funded by the Islamic Development Bank. It is meant to install a community Solar Oven under "Light Up your Future" program in Sudan. The goals of the program is the "Socio-economic Empowerment of Young Refugees in Sudan through Sustainable Energy Solutions".

Plan International Sudan’s website can be found here, and IsDB here.

More info to come during project’s implementation.

11 solar ovens in Uganda

Second project with Plan International
We are back in action in Uganda with Plan International Finland and Plan Uganda! We already delivered two of our solar bakery and entrepreneurship trainings at Plan’s SmartUp Factory Hubs in 2018. Now we’re back to do another nine installations and trainings, and two refreshers! We have a bigger team and our ovens and Lytefire concentrators are better than ever. Soon Uganda may be East Africa’s solar baking capital!

We’re delivering these training sessions to two types of groups this time; SmartUp Hubs, which are youth training centers where underserved youth can come to learn life-skills and get training on a variety of subjects from tailoring to videography, and we’re also training ‘I-Decide’ groups which are typically women-led rural cooperative businesses that focus on empowering women economically so that they can decide for themselves how to run their lives and not depend on fathers, husbands, brothers or other men who might seek to control them.

During the training we cover three main areas: Lytefire Technical training so that participants have the knowledge to install, calibrate and maintain the equipment, bakery skills training where they learn hygiene, ingredients handling and the techniques to make a variety of delicious recipes, and entrepreneurship which includes everything they need to know to market their goods, do the accounting and manage their inventory.

Youth underemployment is a grave problem in Uganda, especially since the start of the pandemic but the great thing about baked goods is that they never go out of style. The fact that these young ‘solarpreneurs’ are using pure, direct solar energy to bake their products only adds to the excitement! Many of the areas where we’re training these youth have no local bakeries. Oftentimes the baked goods come from a town over an hour away, so this, in addition to using free, clean solar energy gives our young solarpreneurs a real advantage.

So far we’ve delivered 7 out of the 11 trainings that are planned. 9 are with fresh new groups and come with the latest and greatest Lytefires produced by our amazing team in Kisumu, Kenya, and the other 2 are ‘refresher’ trainings where we’ll revisit the Lytefires we installed in 2018 to train newcomers and conduct training according to the needs of the groups.

It has so far been a tremendous experience, meeting inspiring young people and adapting our trainings to the needs of each group. We’re recognizing that no two groups of young people from different areas are the same, and their needs differ greatly. Luckily, we have a really amazing team on the ground (if I do say so myself!). We have two training teams working at the same time, the first includes me (Lorin) as well as Augustine (who was one of the SmartUp youth we trained in 2018!) and Allen (a baking industry veteran who is based in Lira, Uganda) and they are training the I-Decide groups, scattered around Lira and the Northern Region, and the second team includes Callum, Hanna and Hashimu, who you might remember from our project last year in Tanzania at the Montessori School in Mwanza. Callum, Hanna and Hasheem are now rocking the SmartUp Hubs (follow us on Instagram @Lytefire_Solar, to not miss out on some pretty incredible content!)

We are extremely grateful to Plan International and Plan Uganda for their support, and we’re proud to have a partner that is so dedicated to the well-being of young people. They’ve recognized that the Lytefire alongside the training we offer tick many many boxes: environmentally sustainable technology, healthy production of healthy products, socially just organization, empowerment for women and girls, cost effective business, and life skills not limited to hygiene, business administration, accounting and more! It’s not always easy when you assemble a bunch of young people together and put money on the table, but that’s the beauty of projects like this, we can facilitate life changing experiences and set youth on a course for a prosperous and sustainable future.

We’re looking forward to sharing success stories with you, and to working together with Plan to implement this program in more and more groups around the world.

More about the SmartUp Factory Program here.

Update from Spring 2022 - the project has been fully delivered and about 200 participants have been trained, resulting in the creation of 9 local solar bakeries. Read more in the posts.

A Montessori school in Tanzania

Installing 3 solar ovens in Mwanza.
The project with Mwanza’s Montessori school started in 2021 and is a full success because the school is since then not only solar baking 300 buns per day and saving on the energy bill but they also sale their extra baked production. The canteen is equiped with several Lytefire Pro.

The Montessori School and Teacher Training Center Mwanza is an education
campus for more than 1000 students. The school provides facilities from nursery
school over primary school to secondary school as well as Montessori teacher training. The staff was willing to implement 3 Lytefire and to be trained to solar baking.

In Mwanza’s Montessori school, there is a considerable demand for bread and baked goods already coming from within the institution. Beyond that, the goal is to open a shop in the neighbourhood and sell the solar-baked goods.

Our targeted goals are to create savings for the school with internalization of daily buns production, to reinforce education to climate change to the youth and the pedagogical team, and to foster a spirit of entrepreneurship among students and staff. 18 students and 6 staff members have been trained.

After a year, the school is organizing 20 solar baking days per month. Each time 452 buns (80gr each) + 100 cookies (17gr) per day are solar baked, 37.8 kg per day. They bake 9040 buns + 2000 cookies per month (757 kg per month). On this, 352 buns are used for the school and what they don’t have to buy any more bring them 25 Euros per day (500 Euros per month). On top of this, the school is selling 100 cookies (0.08 EUR each) and 100 buns (0.10 EUR each) per day to the students of the school, which creates an earning of 18 Euros per day (260 Euros per month).

2021 is also the year where Lytefire solar solution has been selected as one of the top solutions for canteens of the Global South by EDUCATION FINLAND, the platform of the Finnish National Agency for Education and the Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Finland.

Mwanza Montessori school website is here.

A rural solar bakery in Tanzania

Tujijenge is a women community group that is producing both dehydrated fish and baked goods. They also engage in roasting peanuts and baked sweet potatoes. Before a project with them, every month they spent about $400 in charcoal expenses, and we were happy to see that the Lytefire has been making a big financial difference. Monica Matcha is the lead person and listening to her team’s experience is enlightening.

Solar canteen in Kakuma Region

Don Bosco brings Solar Entrepreneurship to Refugees Settlement in Kenya
After the successful implementation of 3 solar ovens in Embu’s vocational school during Spring 2022, the project is replicated in a northern region impacted by the refugee’s crisis.

With Don Bosco Jugendhilfe Weltweit we have found a new project partner dedicated to empowering youths. Active all over the world, this organization supports hundreds of vocational training centers, across Africa and beyond. Our cooperation starts in Kenya, with two vocational schools, one of them in the Kakuma region, hosting the world’s largest refugee site. Together we empower youths with the equipment and skills to become solar entrepreneurs.

More about this project (in German):
https://www.donbosco.ch/projekte/alle-projekte/afe-21-001/

The site of Don Bosco Jugendhilfe Weltweit, the general salesian organization based in Switzerland, is here.

More info to come during project’s implementation.

Lougsi’s rural bakery, Burkina-Faso

The 105 women of Lougsi village, situated 30km away from Ouagadougou, have been supported by the local association SOS Energie, our team and Jansen Primesteps Foundation to get a solar oven. After 2 years, 15 of them that have been trained to solar baking and are using their Lytefire in order to produce bread 5 days a week and sell it all around. They no longer buy wood and coal and the solar oven allows them to save 750 to 1000 CFA per day (entre 1 et 2 Euros), which is significant in this tough rural context.

The Ladies of Goghin, Burkina Faso

The Ladies of Goghin, solar bakers in Burkina Faso in 2020
Mr Vincent Nikiema, founder of SOS Energie Burkina Faso, has been following our work for a decade. Thanks to the support of ASW and the generosity of our supporters, Lorin Symington, Samuel Martin, who’s joining now Lorin in his work, and Marin Pouabidjie, our representative in Burkina-Faso, have been able to coordinate the implementation of a solar oven and a training.

We’re very happy to announce the ladies of Goghin have gone solar!

Thanks to your generous contributions on the crowdfunding, the hard work of Vincent Nikiema and his association SOS Énergie Burkina and the contribution of L’Association pour un Monde Solidaire (ASW) we were able to deliver a great training package to members of this rural women’s group.

Over the course of about 3 weeks, our team in Burkina Faso delivered and installed a Lytefire6 along with all the equipment needed for a small bakery, and we conducted two training modules, one focusing on small scale entrepreneurship skills, and the other on practical baking skills.

For the entrepreneurship training, we had said that we could handle a class size of about 15. Nearly 30 women showed up! Only a handful of them could read and write, but all of them wanted to learn more about how to handle money and improve their business skills. Of course, we could not turn them away. Fortunately, our entrepreneurship educator, Somé Alexis has extensive experience training women of all education levels, and he brought an additional helper who is fluent in Mooré, the language of the Mossi people.

While the ladies were learning how to do book keeping, budgeting and other entrepreneurship skills, we worked with some men from the village to ensure they had the know-how to install and calibrate the mirrors on the Lytefire. A number of young men came and went, but in our experience young men move around too much so even if they are trained up, they might not be around when they are needed. We worked with Mr. Sédou and André Nikiema (Vincent’s brother) to install and calibrate the mirrors of the Lytefire. This was also a great chance to see our country manager Martin Poubidjie in action, teaching others how to calibrate.

For the practical bakery portion of the training package, Mr. Jean Bosco made his appearance again and he and his son Allain spent a week with the ladies teaching them the fundamentals of baking, from good ingredient storage habits, to hygiene, proper measuring technique, how to vary the amount of yeast depending on temperature (when it’s 42degC in the afternoon, you don’t need as much yeast as in the morning!) and, very importantly, good kneading technique.

Their village is about 15 minutes off the road from Ouagadougou to Bobo Diolasso about 45 minutes from the city. There is an industrial bakery in the nearby town of Tanghin Dassouri that makes only (in my opinion) cardboard tasting baguettes, but there are so many other delicious varieties of bread and treats to make and the ladies have been very excited to learn some tastier recipes.

Based on our experiences with Remar, we have increased the surface area of the Lytefire from 5 square meters to 6 because the quality of sunlight in Burkina Faso is relatively low due to all the atmospheric dust blown off the Sahara. While you might not see a rain cloud for 9 months of the year, the skies always have a slight-to-severe white haze. For those of you who know your Direct Normal Irradiation levels, Ouagadougou and the surrounds receive about 1500w/m2 annually. For such a sunny country that isn’t very high and it’s due to the intense dustiness. Increasing the power of the Lytefire by 20% compensates for this.

As part of our package we also included a gas powered baking oven for those months of the year when there is simply too much dust (Harmattan wind season) and for the rainy season (July-August). The cost of LPG gas is very high for village life and so we’re very much looking forward to the accounting data the ladies have agreed to share with us.

Haiti with Remar

In Haiti with Remar in 2020
For this new project with Remar, a solar oven is needed for an orphanage in Tabarre, Port-au-Prince.

The place is taking care of about 20 young boys, providing a safe space for them to grow, learn and play. The orphanage is in a nice big sprawling house in Tabarre, not far from Doctors Without Borders. There are solar panels on the roof, clothes drying lines, friendly teachers, some very vocal dogs and Antonia. She is one of the primary caregivers and she will be the resident baker-in-chief. The goal of the project is to enable them to bake bread and treats for the household and also bake bread, cookies and bonbon sirop (a local muffin like treat) for the neighbourhood and bring in a little extra money to the orphanage.

REMAR INTERNATIONAL, is a non-governmental organization (NGO) for the assistance, promotion and development of marginalized people, and has dedicated the last 26 years to fighting against injustice, drug addiction, hunger, malnutrition, poverty, disease, underdevelopment, illiteracy, child abuse, lack of education and the conditions which stimulate these problems. At present they are working in 70 countries around the world.

Remar works towards: Social equality and justice as a means of obtaining a fairer and more humane world. The encouragement of integral and sustainable development reaching beyond the limits of our own interventions, in order to obtain structural changes with wider repercussions. Solidarity and commitment in favour of the interests of marginalized and disadvantaged people. A deep respect for democratic and Christian values. The sustainability of natural resources.

In all their zones of operation they identify periods of short or long term intervention when they work together with the communities in an endeavour to put a stop on the structural causes of poverty and to strengthen the common bonds of solidarity. They also give technical and economic assistance in emergency situations caused by natural catastrophes, wars or any other kind of human disaster confronting the people.

A school goes solar in Embu, Kenya

The dawn of solar project in Embu with Don Bosco
We are very happy to start a new cooperation with the Don Bosco salesian institution and their local group in Kenya for the implementation of several Lytefire units during 2021. Don Bosco has a wide reach, with over 100 institutions worldwide. Our first cooperation is starting in Embu.

Embu is a town on the foothills of Mount Kenya, with wide landscapes, endless fields and fresh, crisp air. The town is alive in all senses of the word, the local markets bustle with activity! Traders crowd every street corner selling produce from their farms, and vendors sell various items by the roads. The Don Bosco Technical Institute was founded in 1985 and there are four schools in Kenya.

The Technical Institute in Embu is located 15 minutes from the city centre on an impressive self-sustaining 90-acre property. The school is one huge family, housing within its grounds over 40 members of staff and over 200 students aged between 14 and 21. Resultantly, there is a high demand for bread and other baked goods that are often consumed during tea breaks. The students divide their time between classrooms and workshops where the youngsters are taught vocational skills like woodwork, masonry, metalwork and electrical work.

By installing three Lytfire 5 Solar Ovens the school will be able to make their own bread and other baked goods! Not only is the concentrator saving the school money but surplus items will be sold to the local community and institutions in order to keep the bakery self-sufficient and economically viable.

Three groups of about 12 participants will be trained over the next two months and some will integrate the bakery team.

Don Bosco’s Technical School Embu’s website can be found here. The site of Don Bosco Jugendhilfe Weltweit, the general salesian organization based in Switzerland, is here.

More news on this project to read here!

Ethiopia with STEM Synergy

Our partnership with STEM Synergy is in place since 2021 and keeps going. It started with empowering the first entrepreneurs in Ethiopia to run their bakeries not on firewood, but instead on clean, affordable, direct solar energy.

This is accomplished with the Lytefire Solar Oven, that is already in use by entrepreneurs in other countries with ample sunshine.

STEM Synergy, is a US-Ethiopian NGO, focused on empowering youths and women through practical education, sustainable local solutions and entrepreneurship in Ethiopia.

Establishing the positive impact of the Lytefire in Ethiopia will go a long way to improve local incomes and livelihoods, reduce carbon emissions and the deforestation that is caused by the rampant use of firewood (and charcoal made from trees).

By primarily empowering women to become solar entrepreneurs, the project also uses solar energy as a force to tackle Sustainable Development Goal 5 : Gender Equality.

We are especially excited about STEM Synergy’s long-term approach to poverty alleviation :

“Short-term humanitarian aid to help poor people is usually not enough to lift them out of the cycle of poverty. Poverty alleviation is a long-term strategy that should lead to self-reliance and sustainability. Technology and innovation are the best weapons to fight poverty and break the cycle of individual and societal poverty in Africa. “ Yishehak Shata, Chair of Board of Directors, STEM Synergy

With the Lytefire we have developed a technology that fits STEM Synergy’s goals and that can be used to power local, sustainable entrepreneurship. With STEM Synergy’s excellent technical and educational expertise, we are sure that our partnership in form of a license will unleash a wave of solar entrepreneurship in the country with time.

You can see here an update from 2025 presenting some projects ran by STEM in the country.

STEM Synergy’s website : https://stemsynergy.org/

First Trainings for Plan in Uganda

First trainings in Uganda with Plan International

In partnership with Plan International Finland and Plan International Uganda, we started a new cooperation in Uganda in 2018 providing Lytefire units and educational trainings to the SmartUp Factory program in Uganda.

Since its creation in 2015, SmartUp Factory is driven by the idea that "since the poor and marginalized youth experience the challenges in their community and society first hand they are in a crucial position to identify those challenges and come up with innovative solutions to them."

Every month, Plan International Uganda is welcoming 20-30 new youths to the venue and they receive full access to the mentoring, trainings and equipment. The program is currently running in six locations in Uganda. Since its creation, SmartUp has already supported more than 3500 youths.

In this project, our team is providing Lytefire5 units, hands on trainings, theoretical lessons and support with the incubation of solar bakeries.

After the first educational packages in Gulu and Tororo, 22 entrepreneurs students were trained and 2 solar bakeries have been launched. Impressed by the efficiency of the Lytefire5 and the rich content of the educational package, Plan International is willing now to install 50 to 100 solar concentrators in the country, empowering 400 to 800 young entrepreneurs and we are fund raising to achieve this goal.

More about the SmartUp Factory Program here.

Pain solaire au Burkina Faso

Une boulangerie solaire avec les femmes de Lougsi
C’est encore grâce à la motivation de Mr Vincent Nikiema, fondateur de SOS Energie Burkina Faso, qu’un nouveau projet local a été possible au Burkina-Faso cette année avec le soutien de la Fondation PrimeSteps. Notre collègue Martin Pouabidjie, s’est chargé de superviser la construction et d’organiser la formation aux bases de l’entrepreneuriat et à la boulangerie. Voici son récapitulatif.

"Ces jours derniers nous sommes allés installer un four solaire Lytefire 6 dans la communauté des femmes de Lougsi située à environ 30km de Ouagadougou.
Nous avons été très bien accueillis par la communauté des femmes de ce groupe et par les villageois.
C’est notre second projet avec l’association SOS Energie soutenu par la Fondation Jansen PrimeSteps. Pour ces femmes, la Lytefire va les aider à être indépendantes financièrement, elles pourront désormais contribuer dans la scolarisation de leurs enfants, contribuer à leurs soins et aux dépenses familiale.
Je me suis occupé de la partie installation et les bases de l’entreprenariat, avec l’aide de Tagnabou, et Philippe le boulanger de The Taste a géré la formation aavec le pain. Tous ensemble on a cuit plusieurs types de pains (sucré, au lait, au sésame, brioche, pain de mine, cake, biscuits, pastel, pain salé,...).

Les femmes ont hâte d’aller vendre leurs pains dans les marchés maintenant. Elles ont déjà mûri leur stratégie afin de conquérir les différents marchés. Avec Solar Fire l’indépendance financière des femmes est assurée !"

Burkina Faso with Remar

First solar bakery in Burkina Faso with Remar
Remar reached out to us after seeing videos of solar baking with Lytefire in East Africa and Europe. They are creating a bakery training centre for women from Kossodo in Wend Kuuni, Ouagadougou, the capital of Burkina Faso.

It took less than a month from first contact until Lorin arrived in Burkina Faso and began sourcing the materials, getting to know the workshop and welders and started taking the first steps to build at least one Lytefire5 with baking oven.

The objectives of this project are to sustainably improve the income of excluded women through occupational training that fosters equitable economic growth, creating tools for employment and promoting self-esteem, being able to generate favorable factors for poverty reduction and social cohesion. First result of this project: the creation of a solar bakery at Remar’s facilities in Ouagadougou (read our post here).

REMAR INTERNATIONAL, is a non-governmental organization (NGO) for the assistance, promotion and development of marginalized people, and has dedicated the last 26 years to fighting against injustice, drug addiction, hunger, malnutrition, poverty, disease, underdevelopment, illiteracy, child abuse, lack of education and the conditions which stimulate these problems.

Remar works towards:
Social equality and justice as a means of obtaining a fairer and more humane world.
The encouragement of integral and sustainable development reaching beyond the limits of our own interventions, in order to obtain structural changes with wider repercussions.
Solidarity and commitment in favour of the interests of marginalized and disadvantaged people.
A deep respect for democratic and Christian values.
The sustainability of natural resources.

In all their zones of operation they identify periods of short or long term intervention when they work together with the communities in an endeavour to put a stop on the structural causes of poverty and to strengthen the common bonds of solidarity. They also give technical and economic assistance in emergency situations caused by natural catastrophes, wars or any other kind of human disaster confronting the people.

We’re really excited to be starting this new partnership in 2019-2020 and we hope that it will lead to many more Lytefires installed with communities in need around the world.

First solar bakeries in Tanzania

In the Mara region, Tanzania with Global Resources
Alliance and Wärtsilä in 2017

Our company started 3 new pilots in Tanzania’s Mara region with the NGO Global Resources Alliance and a sponsorship from Finland with Wärtsilä Corporation. Mara region is on shore of lake Victoria, where solar thermal energy can play a key role in improving livelihoods of rural people.

It was for a us a new partner with the US-Tanzanian NGO Global Resource Alliance and starting in a new country, with many new challenges. 3 groups were identified by our partner and got Lytefire 5 devices to improve their business activity.

Sponsored by Wärtsilä corporation and in cooperation with Global Resource Alliance, this project enables solar entrepreneurship in high-impact areas where people are in dire need of a clean and affordable energy solution.

In Musoma, the Alpha Women’s group is operating a bakery selling bread and cakes made from wheat and kassava flour. They used simple pots and charcoal for baking as they haven’t been able to invest in a proper oven yet.

The second group, Tujijenge, is producing both dehydrated fish and baked goods like the groups above, but they also engage in roasting peanuts and baked sweet potatoes. Every month they spend about $400 in charcoal expenses, and we were happy to see that the Lytefire5 is making a big financial difference.

The last one will use a newly developed solar dehydrator design to dry Tilapia fish. Currently, like so many entrepreneurs in Tanzania, they use firewood to do this. With Lytefire they can save the money they spend now on fuel and also produce a higher quality product with no burnt wood taste.

Impact: in 2017, 9 additional Lytefire were installed in Tanzania and Kenya, 54 entrepreneurs were trained in different communities of entrepreneurs in both countries, we estimate 134 tons of yearly CO2 saving and our demos events reached over 2000 people in different location. Data and economics collection is ongoing during all 2018.

Watch below our short presentation of the achievements in Kenya and Tanzania. The video presenting solar baking women was commissioned to Global Resource Alliance and done by local video maker.

Watch also a 11 minutes film of our actions in Kenya and Tanzania

Here Wärtsilä’s video about their sponsorship.

Global Resources Alliance website is here.

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DIY

People building their own Lytefire (some being entrepreneurs as well)

Conserverie Fourmi, France

Conserverie Fourmi opened its doors in 2024. Created by Manon Robert and Quentin Feutren near Rennes, France, they use the Lytefire to make their energy mix more sustainable. The company offers workshops for individuals and a solar food conservation processing service for professionals. Their wish? "To explore new ways of preserving plant food to strengthen local organic production chains and empower men and women to preserve seasonal fruits and vegetables in a resource-efficient manner, serving the food resilience of the region."

→ Visit their site

Pierre Brun in Mexico

It’s always amazing for us to see someone courageous sharing the spirit and deciding to put time, energy, effort and money into building a DIY solar oven. This one was built early 2025 in Mexico by Pierre Brun and friends from Quebec with our plans.

As you can see, yummy solar food is being baked!

© Brasserie Hélie
© Brasserie Hélie
© Brasserie Hélie
© Brasserie Hélie
© Brasserie Hélie

Hélie Microbrewery, France

Micro-brasserie Hélie opened its doors in 2023 and organized a successful crowdfunding (here). Created by Romain Zamboni near Montbéliard, it is a strong example of real circular economy. Hélie’s beers use local ingredients. The beer is certified organic and brewed using solar energy, using a solar concentrator Lytefire DIY Stove built and thermal solar panels. Romain is Europe’s first solar brewer. The bottles are reusable,and manufacturing waste is limited as much as possible, some of it being recycled for animal feed. The water needed for cooling is reused in the manufacturing circuit. After 2 years of activity, Romain needs to increase his production and therefor he is switching to a new solar system.
→ Visit the site

© G. Pourcelot
© Low-Tech Lab Grenoble
© Au Gré du Soleil
© Scouts et Guides de France

Grégoire Pourcelot, France

Low-tech Lab Grenoble’s association aims to disseminate, identify and promote low-tech in the region. Grégoire Pourcelot is a low-tech developer, active member and a builder. He wishes to support any one wishing to build their own Lytefire DIY stove or Lytefire DIY oven. With Grégoire, the Low-Tech Lab undertakes to carry out the constructions. The level of support is flexible and the training courses are suitable for everyone, whatever the level of DIY (very beginner to expert). Grégoire can also build for you a Lytefire Artisan.

→ See Facebook account
→ Contact: gregpourcelot@hotmail.fr and grenoble@lowtechlab.org

© Solarstart
© Solarstart
© Solarstart

Solarstart, Switzerland

With Solarstart, Muriel wants to make young and old aware of the incredible potential of solar thermal energy in baking and cooking in Switzerland. The association first used an experimental Lytefire with a wooden structure and in 2024 they got a Lytefire DIY oven from France. Muriel organizes events to raise awareness about solar baking. She’d like to lend her Lytefire so that entrepreneurs in Switzerland can also test sun-baked bread and roasted nuts!
→ Visit the site

Kurt Baumann, Crafts Class in Switzerland

Kurt Baumann is a crafts-teacher and based on our DIY construction plans he built a Lytefire 4 Stovetop as a project with his students. The project was an ideal choice for the youngsters to develop their skills in metalworks. And finally they prepared a delicious lunch with the Lytefire!

This Lytefire was later on donated to us and we brought it to France, where it finally continued a new life as part of workshops for schoolchildren with Les Vagabonds de l’énergie.
→ More about the schoolclass on our blog

GrowNYC and Staten Island Makerspace, USA

Plant, harvest and cook food while learning about sustainability and green jobs - that’s what happens at GrowNYC’s Teaching Garden where one of our Lytefire solar concentrators is regularly used by students since our first cooperation back in 2015. During 2 years, every week, students from around NYC take field trips to the Teaching Garden and are blown away by the power of the sun when they prepare off-grid meals.

→ Read more about this project

Heuberge Mountain Resort, Switzerland

We have started a cooperation with Heuberge Resort family resort based in the Swiss Alps in 2020. We have been building for them a Lytefire DIY Oven (all in wood!) as well as several high tech solar saunas using Lytefire solar concentration system. We hope they will be an inspirational example for the other mountain resorts suffering more and more from global warming.
→ Visit the site

© Ekopraktik
© Ekopraktik
© Ekopraktik

Ekopratik, France (La Réunion)

Sylvain Barbot and volunteers are running this dynamic association based on the island of La Réunion. Their goal is to spread low-tech and solutions supporting sustainability and solar bakery with the BouSol project (Boulangerie Solaire). Together, they built a nice Lytefire DIY stove with a low-tech oven.
→ Visit Ekopratik’s site
→ Visit BouSol’s Facebook page

© Vagabond·es de l’énergie
© Vagabond·es de l’énergie
© Vagabond·es de l’énergie
© Vagabond·es de l’énergie
© Vagabond·es de l’énergie

Les Vagabonds de l’énergie, France

Founded by Arnaud Crétot and Robin Deloof in 2009, Les Vagabonds de l’énergie is non-profit association based in Normandy. They are pioneers in the field of education on climate change. Nowadays, Clément Bresciani and the volunteers are informing kids in schools and enthusiastic perople during festivals. In 2020, the Vagabonds raised funds to start educational solar baking projects in the region. We have been lending them a Lytefire DIY oven in 2020-2023. They are focused on spreading awareness about degrowth and renewable energies.
→ Visit the site

© Au gré du soleil
© Au gré du soleil

Au Gré du Soleil, France

Graduated as baker in 2022, Violaine decided to create the Au Gré du Soleil bakery in her region. Initially tempted by the Lytefire Deluxe on a trailer, she wanted to move it only a few times per year to bring it from her home to a family plot. She finally turned to self-construction supported by Artisan Grégoire and the LowTech Lab in Grenoble. She carried out her crowdfunding campaign and, she realized that if necessary, her Lytefire without a trailer could be easily dismantled and stored in a small van. Consistency and respect for nature are strong values for Violaine. She is starting her bakery in 2024 and she will operate on direct orders and a few markets with her sourdough breads that are made the most local possible.
→ No site, no social media

© Low-Tech Lab Grenoble
© Low-Tech Lab Grenoble
© Low-Tech Lab Grenoble
© Low-Tech Lab Grenoble

Low-Tech Lab, France

The Low-tech Lab Grenoble association offers training cycles for the self-construction of Lytefire DIY with a stove and Lytefire DIY oven. The goal is to support bakers, restaurateurs, brewers, individuals or any other organizations wishing to make their own Lytefire. The level of support is flexible so do not hesitate to contact them directly if you are interested!
→ Contact: gregpourcelot@hotmail.fr and grenoble@lowtechlab.org

Student Group in Pakistan

Muhammad Hassaan is a 23 year old engineering student from Pakistan. For his final project, Muhammad and his two other teammates Zia Bakht Butt and Bilal Ahmad designed a hybrid solar and biomass power generation system. Part of their system was a solar concentrator, and they were looking for a simple and effective design to bundle sunlight. With our DIY construction plans, they built the Lytefire and were able to successfully test their use-case.
→ More about their project on our blog.

Moutasem Hassan, Palestine

After studying abroad and working in the solar industry in the US, Moutasem Hassan is ready to return to his conflict-ridden home country and promote solar energy for a more independent Palestine.

Moutasem is motivated by the fact that solar energy not only creates jobs and reduces fossil fuel dependence, it also reduces the greenhouse gas emissions and could pose a way out of poverty. “I’m especially excited about this technology because it can be built locally, so it will not be limited by the harsh import duties imposed on us by Israel.”

Learn more about him and his successful construction.

Lytefire in New York!

USA - 2015 - Staten Island Makerspace

Plant, harvest and cook food while learning about sustainability and green jobs - that’s what happens at GrowNYC’s Teaching Garden where one of our Lytefire solar concentrators is regularly used by students since our first cooperation back in 2015. During 2 years, every week, students from around NYC take field trips to the Teaching Garden and are blown away by the power of the sun when they prepare off-grid meals.

One day, we’d like to go back in New York with a workshop where Lorin Symington will share with participants the basis of how to build and use our powerful solar oven. Like the cooker from 2015, the built oven will remain with GrowNYC to support their educational activities surrounding the Teaching Garden.

The solar concentrator was built in cooperation with the Staten Island Makerspace, and stands in GrowNYC’s Teaching Garden. GrowNYC is a non-profit which improves New York City’s quality of life through environmental programs like the Governors Island Teaching Garden.

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