Driving Rural Prosperity: JICA Visits Darway Coast to Advance Productive Use of Energy (PUE)
Darway Coast welcomed the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) team to its Lagos office yesterday, marking a significant step in strengthening Nigeria’s renewable energy ecosystem and rural development efforts. Their visit reflects a shared commitment: ensuring that clean energy does more than power bulbs — it powers livelihoods.
Why JICA’s Visit Matters
JICA’s interest extends beyond the technology of mini-grids. Their mission is rooted in the people who rely on them — especially the farmers whose daily work forms the backbone of rural economies. By engaging with these communities, JICA aims to understand their agricultural needs, income challenges, and growth aspirations while introducing opportunities for Productive Use of Energy (PUE).
PUE solutions — such as irrigation pumps, milling equipment, refrigeration for produce, and small processing machinery — are known to significantly increase rural productivity. Commercial activities powered by these tools consume far more energy than households alone, making them essential for stabilizing electricity demand and improving the long-term sustainability of mini-grids.
For Darway Coast, this alignment is important. Clean energy should not end at lighting and phone charging; it should stimulate economic activity, raise incomes, and fuel community prosperity.
Empowering Farmers Through PUE
The JICA team brings extensive experience from its SHEP (Smallholder Horticulture Empowerment & Promotion) approach, which has delivered strong results in multiple African countries. SHEP helps farmers set practical targets, make informed decisions, and adopt modern tools that increase yield and income.
A major strength of this approach is how it helps farmers understand the economic value of energy-powered agricultural tools. With the right knowledge, farmers are more confident in adopting technologies — sometimes individually, sometimes collectively — that can scale their production and improve their livelihoods.
By integrating these principles with Darway Coast’s mini-grid communities, the visit aims to support a transition from subsistence-level farming to profitable, market-driven agriculture.
A Win-Win for Communities and Mini-Grids
For rural families, PUE opens the door to higher incomes, new business opportunities, and greater financial security.
For Darway Coast, increased productive energy use strengthens demand on existing mini-grids — ensuring consistent consumption, higher system efficiency, and long-term financial sustainability.
Rural electrification thrives when energy access and economic opportunity grow side by side. The JICA visit reinforces this balance, helping bridge the gap between clean energy supply and meaningful productive use.
Looking Ahead
This engagement represents more than a formal visit; it signals the beginning of a deeper collaboration between Darway Coast and JICA. Together, both organizations aim to support farmers, boost community resilience, and build a model where renewable energy drives real economic transformation.
Darway Coast remains committed to powering not only homes, but dreams, dignity, and development across Nigeria’s rural communities.



