CES has designed and built several projects to bring solar energy to remote villages, where around 50% of families live in poverty. These rural communities are not connected to the country’s electricity grid. They have relied solely on diesel generators for electricity and have experienced power cuts during diesel fuel shortages. With the price of diesel fuel doubling in the recent years, solar energy provides significant savings for families, businesses, and farms.
CES has also installed solar hybrid systems for 3,441 homes in the rural communities of Sohag in Upper Egypt, Marsa Matrouh along the Northern Coast, and North and South Sinai. By reducing diesel fuel consumption, these families are able to immediately cut their energy costs in half and save money for food, education, and health services.
Along with that, CES designed and built Egypt’s first large-scale solar plants in the Siwa oasis, and several remote Red Sea communities.
Recently CES started working on the first large-scale, grid-connected solar plant for agricultural farms near Egypt’s Toshka lakes. With over half of Egypt’s population employed in the agricultural sector, renewable energy will help farms become more productive and profitable.