Extractivists benefit from donation of PV system with batteries

Installation guarantees energy supply and increased income for workers in the Bailique Archipelago
Photovoltaic system will boost the community's production chain. Photo: Nágila Rocha/PMM

More than 70 extractivist women da Limão do Curuá community, the Amazon riverside region of Bailique, received the donation of a solar energy system Macapá City Hall (AP) so that your activities are not impacted from lack of energy.

The group is part of the Amelc (Association of Extractive Women of Limão do Curuá), which has in Pracaxi seed oil crop production their only source of income. 

It is a herbal product known for its antivenom and healing power, which has been gaining notoriety in the pharmaceutical and cosmetics industries. Currently, Workers produce around two thousand liters of oil per harvest. 

With the arrival of battery systems, the idea is to increase productivity and reaching new customers, since the equipment has the capacity to make fans, freezers, refrigerators, drinking fountains and LED lamps work uninterruptedly. 

The installation will also allow the inauguration of the community's industrial blenders, which had never been turned on due to the power outage. The equipment is used to process and crush the pracaxi fruit.

O power kit delivered by the City Hall is compounds by photovoltaic modules, inverters and battery bank, And fixing and cabling structures.

The installation was carried out by Cipemac (Public Lighting, Sustainable Energy and Sanitation Company of the Municipality of Macapá). 

According to Claudiane Barbosa, president of Amelc, the system installation in the locality was a ancient demand of the women's group.

“We have been fighting since 2003 and this is the first time we have received material like this. Now we will be able to increase our production and generate more income,” she said. 

Pracaxi seed extracted by the Amelc women's group. Photo: Jesiel Braga/PMM

Limão do Curuá Community

Limão do Curuá is one of 50 communities in the Bailique Archipelago, characterized as a territory of traditional populations adapted to and dependent on natural ecosystems for their cultural and socioeconomic reproduction.

The community was formed on the banks of the Curuá River, being made up of families who make a living from açaí management, artisanal fishing for fish and shrimp, and the extraction of pracaxi oil, as is the case of extractivist women from the Limão do Curuá Community. . 

Photo by Henrique Hein
Henrique Hein
He worked at Correio Popular and Rádio Trianon. He has experience in podcast production, radio programs, interviews and reporting. Has been following the solar sector since 2020.

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