Educating users
7.37 Customer satisfaction with solar home systems also depends
on the user education provided by program administrators, technicians, and
suppliers. The education program should cover routine maintenance procedures
such as watering batteries (including how to collect clean rainwater if
distilled water is not readily available), interpreting control panel
information, managing loads, solar access, and replacing fuses and bulbs.
Customer education should also make clear the capabilities and limitations of
the particular solar home system.
7.38 "Overselling" the capabilities of solar home systems can
quickly lead to customer dissatisfaction and poor repayment levels. In the
Pansiyagama Project in Sri Lanka, overzealous promoters showed videos of
PV-operated sewing machines, pumps, and power tools to prospective customers.
The 21-Wp and 52-Wp systems subsequently installed under the project could not
run these appliances. This resulted in unhappy customers and service problems in
collecting fees. Educating users about recurring system costs, particularly the
need to replace automotive batteries every two to three years, is also
important.
7.39 In Sri Lanka, regular visits from technicians during the
first year helped train families to use their systems properly and to learn
effective load management practices. User education should be directed at the
persons in the households responsible for the routine maintenance. These are
generally older children or women. Women and children typically derive greater
benefits than men do from the solar home systems. They are willing and
interested in taking a proportionate share in caring for their systems. In many
countries, children from the ages of 11-15 are also those household members most
interested in the technical aspects of the solar home system and are therefore
more likely to understand the load management principles. To increase
involvement of women and children, training should take place in the home
whenever possible, preferably with the installation team or technician providing
information based on materials and guidelines supplied by the vendor. Solar home
system programs also afford excellent opportunities to train women for both
administrative and technical positions.
7.40 In summary, technical performance is key to the long-term
sustainability of a PV household electrification program. Consumers need
well-designed, properly assembled, and correctly installed products that are
affordable and fit their budgets. Overselling must be avoided. Spare parts
should be easily available as well as local, appropriately trained technicians
to provide maintenance and repair services. User education should target those
members of the household most affected by the system and best able to perform
routine maintenance
tasks.