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Tackling energy poverty with Switch Energy Alliance

Jan 25, 2024

Talent, creativity and Sempra support came together at Switch's 2022 Energy Case Competition where 240 global students identified ways to bring energy to communities in need.

Roopmati Meena knows energy poverty first-hand. Meena, a current Ph.D. student at IIT Bombay in India, grew up in Rajasthan where residents have difficulty accessing reliable and safe energy. Although the circumstances have improved over the years, Meena said there is still more work to be done.

Today, Meena is working to be a part of the solution. She's an intern at Switch Energy Alliance (SEA), a nonprofit organization dedicated to inspiring an energy-educated future that is objective, nonpartisan and sensible. She joined SEA, alongside fellow ITT Bombay student Shruti Prajapati, after participating in the annual Energy Case Competition in 2022. The Competition was made possible in part through a $50,000 Sempra grant, where hundreds of students worked together to identify ways to address energy poverty. Energy experts estimate more than 750 million people do not have access to electricity and 2.6 billion people lack access to clean cooking technologies.

Photo: Roopmati Meena, an intern at Switch Energy Alliance and Ph.D. student at IIT Bombay, participated in the 2022 Energy Case Competition sponsored by Sempra

The Competition, which has seen participation from thousands of students from 43 countries, presents students with energy challenges facing three specific countries. Students are grouped into teams and have the option of working with a mentor who is from the energy industry or in academia.

Meena's team focused on identifying solutions in Ghana where uneven distribution of renewable energy resources, unsafe cooking fuel, and unreliable and expensive electricity supply are the main factors driving energy poverty, she said.

The team identified a hybrid model of solar photovoltaic technology to produce energy for communities in need. The team also proposed a combination of liquefied petroleum gas and bio-gas-based cylinders as another solution to solve the cooking fuel crisis. To top it off, the team suggested carbon credits as a form of revenue generation that could be used to support grid lines, low-income families, schools, hospitals and more.

Photo: Students, including Roopmati Meena (bottom right) and Shruti Prajapati (left), participated in the 2022 Energy Case Competition sponsored by Sempra

Sempra and Sempra Foundation invest in strategic projects to help improve the world we live in. This has included funding the SEA Case Competition in 2022 and projects that brought solar power and cleaner cookstoves to indigenous communities in the U.S.-Mexico border region in 2021.

Scott Tinker, chairman and founder of SEA, began the nonprofit with the understanding that energy has the ability to bring billions of people out of poverty. Since beginning the Case Competition three years ago, SEA has worked with more than 2,000 students.

For Meena, she hopes to continue researching solar photovoltaic technology. She's also grateful for her time with SEA.

Talent, creativity and Sempra support came together at Switch's 2022 Energy Case Competition where 240 global students identified ways to bring energy to communities in need. Sempra and Sempra Foundation invest in strategic projects to help improve the world we live in