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GivePower
Non-profit organization that develops clean water and energy systems From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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GivePower is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that develops clean water and energy systems in communities across the world.[1] GivePower has installed 2,650 solar power installations in villages across 17 different countries and in underdeveloped areas of the United States.[2][3]
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History
GivePower was co-founded in 2013 in California[4] by Hayes Barnard and Lyndon Rive as the non-profit branch of SolarCity. After SolarCity merged with Tesla in 2016, GivePower was spun off into an independent organization just before the merger was completed.[2][5] The president of GivePower is Hayes Barnard.[2]
In 2014, the organization's first focus was to provide one school with solar-powered lighting for every megawatt of solar system installed by SolarCity that year.[6]
In 2021, GivePower was listed as a finalist in Fast Company's 2021 World Changing Ideas Awards.[7]
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Projects
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In 2016, GivePower began developing solar powered desalination technology that could be exported to developing regions.[3] The desalination systems are contained within 20-foot shipping containers and can desalinate up to 75,000 gallons of seawater and/or brackish water into potable water per day.[8]
In 2018, GivePower installed its first desalination plant in Kiunga, Kenya,[2] which is also solar powered.[9] The project cost $500,000 and took one month to construct.[10] As of 2019, the Kiunga plant could produce enough drinking water for up to 50,000 people per day and requires minimal maintenance.[3]
As of 2018, GivePower had installed 2650 solar power installations in villages through seventeen different countries for institutions like primary schools and medical clinics.[2] They have also developed solar installations in underdeveloped areas of the United States, including the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation.[11] Once installations are completed, GivePower transfers the maintenance and running of them to local communities.[12]
In 2019, GivePower built a 300 kilowatt solar farm on the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation which became the largest solar installation in North Dakota. The project was a partnership between Empowered by Light and GivePower, and the total cost was $470,000. The maintenance of the solar farm also created jobs for the Sioux Nation Tribe.[1] The same year, the organization partnered with World Hope International to build a solar-powered desalination center in Haiti. The water plant was fully operational and self-sufficient by 2020.[13]
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References
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