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Sunday, September 22, 2024

Groot Constantia harnesses people-power to go solar with Sun Exchange

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With the focus firmly on solar power, Groot Constantia, South Africa’s oldest wine-producing farm, has partnered with Sun Exchange, an innovative solar leasing platform, to harness the power of community and go solar.

A ”crowdsale” for a 165 kilowatt (kW) solar plant to power Groot Constantia’s winemaking facilities and restaurants is now being hosted on the Sun Exchange platform.

Through this crowdsale, people across South Africa and the globe can easily buy solar cells for R64.00 per cell, which will be installed in the solar plant that will power Groot Constantia.

Once the 43,448 available solar cells are sold, the solar plant is built and starts generating electricity.

Via the Sun Exchange platform, Groot Constantia will pay solar cell owners for the clean energy they produce for 20 years.

The solar project crowdsale will run throughout the month of July until all solar cells sell out.

The Sun Exchange model enables Groot Constantia to access solar power at a rate lower than standard utility rates, while solar cell owners earn a stream of solar-powered income and support the estate’s transition to clean energy.

The solar plant will help avoid an estimated 4,700 tonnes of carbon emissions in its lifetime.

CEO of Groot Constantia Jean Naudé says this project enables them to protect and conserve our heritage and natural beauty.

For centuries, Groot Constantia has been a place where people from across South Africa and the world come together to enjoy great wine and South Africa’s heritage and natural beauty. Now, we’re looking to the future and working with Sun Exchange to bring together a global community to be part of our solar project.

Abraham Cambridge, CEO, Sun Exchange says they are honoured to have Sun Exchange and the global community be part of their solar power journey.

This project will set a precedent across South Africa’s wine and tourism industries, demonstrating that transitioning away from fossil fuels is the best decision not only from a climate perspective, but also financially.

Since its founding in 2015, Sun Exchange has enabled solar power for more than 60 businesses, farms, schools and other organisations in Southern Africa.

Its solar projects have generated more than 12 Gigawatt-hours of clean energy, avoiding more than 12,000 tonnes of carbon emissions.

Thousands of people from 180 countries across the world use the Sun Exchange platform to buy and own solar cells, produce clean electricity and earn with purpose.

Liesl Smit
Liesl Smit
Liesl is the Smile 90.4FM News Manager. She has been at Smile since 2016, with nearly 20 years experience in the radio industry, including reading news, field reporting and producing. In 2008 she won the Vodacom Journalist of the Year Award, Western Cape region. liesl@smile904.fm

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