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During Niger’s hot season, it’s common for people to follow up their traditional greetings with “Et la Chaleur?” which means, “And the heat?” People nearly always respond to this question with a smile and a small groan.

The heat. In a land covered by the Sahara Desert, the heat and the sun are significant parts of everyday life, and people living in Niger generally try their best to avoid both. However, CURE Niger had recently come to appreciate the sun’s overwhelming presence in this country when they finished installing a new network of solar panels!

The idea of a solar power installation at CURE Niger has been discussed and considered for a long time. It seemed like a great solution to the unstable and costly electricity problem. Frequent power cuts disrupted operations, and power fluctuations negatively affected expensive medical equipment. Inevitably, the cost of supplying the entire hospital with electricity grew high. The hospital did not have stable electricity, but it had an abundance of sun. Finally, in 2015, our former Executive Director, Josh Korn, began working on a grant application for the project with USAID’s ASHA (American Schools and Hospitals Abroad) program.

Fortunately, CURE Niger was not alone in this project! First, we received a grant from USAID for over $400,000, which enabled us to hire Build Health International (BHI), who helped design and implement the project. In recent years, the Niger government has become very interested in solar energy and readily granted authorization for CURE Niger’s project.

Workers begin laying the foundations for solar panels.

Even with the help of these organizations, building an independent solar panel system was a long process! Parts had to be ordered and shipped to Niger from various countries, technicians came to study the ground and install the system, and structures had to be built for storage. After years of coordination and hard work, CURE Niger’s dream has finally become a reality!

Once the solar panels were all in place, we celebrated with a dedication, complete with a ribbon cutting!

The new solar panel system allows CURE Niger to be completely independent of the local electrical grid while providing CURE Niger with electrical stability that enables the hospital to run more efficiently. Furthermore, the system was built to expand as the hospital grows so that it will provide CURE Niger with stable power in the future as well as the present! The hospital’s electricity bill has decreased from $5,000/month to the current $2,000/month needed for maintenance of the new solar panel system. Since it takes approximately $1,000 to fund one surgery, CURE Niger is now able to fund the surgeries of 36 more kids each year with the $36,000 they save annually!

The benefits of this new solar panel system are incredible and have allowed CURE Niger to expand their vision. The money saved on electricity, along with the stability provided by the new system, enable CURE Niger to “heal the sick and proclaim the kingdom of God,” more effectively than in the past. What a gift this new solar panel system will be to the community in and around CURE Niger. Will you join us in praising God for His faithfulness.

About the CURE Children’s Hospital of Niger

CURE Niger has been a place of hope since opening its doors in 2010. Ours is the first and only hospital in the country to provide Christ-centered care and charitable surgeries for children with treatable disabilities. Our teaching hospital has 58 beds, two operating rooms, and an outpatient clinic. In addition to world-class medical care, our team ministers to the emotional and spiritual needs of our patients and their communities.

Contact Us

CURE Niger’s mission is to provide every child living with a disability the physical, emotional, and spiritual care they need to heal. If you have questions about becoming a patient or a partner with CURE, please contact us.

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