Little Sun: The Power Of Art

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By Anne-Sophie Garrigou

Little Sun is a story about passion, art and power, the power of the sun that people harvest themselves with the solar lamp. We met with Olafur Eliasson, the artist behind the project.

I recently had the opportunity to meet with Olafur Eliasson, the artist and co-founder of Little Sun, which produces solar lamps for families living in remote parts of Africa. The Little Sun social enterprise, and now foundation, has already delivered around 280,000 lamps to the continent, helping families save US$1 per week on fuel for kerosene lamps, thereby avoiding 100,000 tons of CO2 emissions in the atmosphere.

Having previously talked about Little Sun in The Beam, physically meeting the minds behind this project gave us further insight into the astonishing modesty of Olafur Eliasson and the Little Sun team.

Olafur began to talk about his travels in Africa, before founding Little Sun, and the first time he experienced a life without access to light. The people he met there were all using kerosene lamps  — an expensive and very harmful light source for both the environment and personal health. Staying four hours near a kerosene lamp is the equivalent of smoking two packs of cigarettes. In fact, four million people die from household pollution every year worldwide.

Olafur and his friend, engineer and solar pioneer Frederik Ottesen, decided to work together to try to replace these toxic kerosene lamps. “When we started it was very much about health,” said the artist, “but we wanted to focus on the positive: it is a project about solar energy, but it is mainly a project about things we have in common around the world. And the necessity of light is something we share.”

I am the power

The passion of the artist is palpable. This project, for him, is about bringing people together, it’s about equality. “We wanted to make solar energy tangible, something you have in your hands. When they grab the lamp, I want people to think ‘I have the power, I am the power’, because what you do with the Little Sun Solar Lamp is you harvest the energy from the sun!”

Since their first discussion about the project, Little Sun has sold more than 500,000 solar lamps worldwide, of which 280,000 were distributed in Africa. That’s 1 euro per week that families didn’t spend on kerosene lamps. If you do the math, that’s 50 million dollars of petroleum saved in four years, and the equivalent of 100,000 tons of CO2 emissions that didn’t get into the atmosphere. Pretty impressive impact for what the founder calls “a small company.”

This wasn’t achieved without making mistakes, and Olafur shared one of them with us. Once the first prototype was ready, he went to Africa to present it to people for whom he created this project. “I went to a market, it was full of little kiosks, and I went to talk to one of the sellers, an old women, to show her the lamp and I told her it was something for the poor people.” In his mind, the artist was bringing a healthier and cheaper solution to African families. “But there are no poor people here Sir, I’m sorry,” answered the street vendor. Lesson learned! “Don’t be condescending, don’t patronize people. It is not about what differentiate us, but what bring us together.”

Olafur insists on this.

Read the entire article here.

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The Beam

The Beam Magazine is an independent climate solutions and climate action magazine. It tells about the most exciting solutions, makes a concrete contribution to eliminating climate injustices and preserving this planet for all of us in its diversity and beauty. Our cross-country team of editors works with a network of 150 local journalists in 50 countries talking to change makers and communities. THE BEAM is published in Berlin and distributed in nearly 1,000 publicly accessible locations, to companies, organizations and individuals in 40 countries across the world powered by FairPlanet.

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