Kiva conducts regular, ongoing monitoring of all Lending Partners, but only posts status updates here in response to relevant, major changes at the partner.

Status update - Oct 9, 2017 

Barefoot Power's final loans with Kiva have defaulted, and this partnership is now closed. For the last 20 months, Kiva has been working with Barefoot Power to try to recover the remaining outstanding amounts due to Kiva lenders.

Barefoot Power has not demonstrated reasonable efforts to collect repayments, in particular from borrowers that are still operating solvent businesses. Barefoot Power’s failure to engage in collection efforts in order to fulfil its repayment obligations constitutes a default under the Kiva Contract and entire outstanding Loan amount is due and payable to Kiva.

Kiva’s present assessment is that this Lending Partner is unwilling to make further payments, and thus the remaining USD38,787  in outstanding amounts due to Kiva lenders has been defaulted. If Kiva is able to recover any additional funds from Barefoot Power, they will be applied to lenders' accounts on a pro-rata basis.


Status update - July 12, 2017 

Since our last update in June 2015, Kiva has been able to recover more than $200k from Barefoot Power, which has been settled out to contributing lenders. Kiva continues to work to recover the remaining amount owed to lenders, which is approximately $30K, and determine the outcome of the remaining Barefoot Power borrowers. 

Status update - June 26, 2015 

Kiva and Barefoot Power have agreed to end their partnership and, as a result, Kiva will be transitioning this Lending Partner to inactive status. This means Barefoot Power is no longer fundraising loans on Kiva, though Kiva fully expects the partner to continue to send repayments owed to Kiva lenders for as long as the partner has an outstanding balance.

Partner description: 


Barefoot Power was Kiva's first partner focused on solar lighting and first SME partner, which is a small or medium-sized enterprise and is a larger business than many of the microbusinesses on Kiva. Over the past 3 years we've seen the challenges that non-financial institutions often face when attempting to launch a credit program in addition to their core business function. SME financing is also particularly risky, because this sized enterprise faces a lot of challenges to become profitable. The solar sector is also rapidly changing, and popular products can easily be displaced by a new model on the market, contributing to many of Barefoot Power's borrowers struggling to repay their loans.

Despite these challenges, Kiva still believes there are opportunities to help meet credit needs for clean energy technologies, and we are using the lessons from our work with Barefoot Power to impact future partnership decisions in this space. We thank Barefoot Power for their partnership over the past 3 years and wish them success in their future endeavors. 

Barefoot Power is a for-profit social enterprise dedicated to providing affordable solar lighting and phone charging solutions to low-income populations that do not have access to electricity. By manufacturing and selling their lights through a diverse network of distributors and retailers, Barefoot provides families and communities with a safe and environmentally friendly alternative to kerosene -- the lighting solution widely used by poor and low-income communities across the world. 

Why replace kerosene? The poor burn USD$17 billion of kerosene each year in lanterns to light their homes. Kerosene is expensive, and the poor lighting from lamps makes it difficult for children to study and minimizes effective working hours for adults. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), there are over 300,000 deaths every year from burns, and nearly 4 million women suffer from severe burns from open fires and kerosene lighting each year (approximately the number who are diagnosed with AIDS each year). In addition, more children die from respiratory illnesses caused by inhaling smoke and kerosene fumes in enclosed spaces than from tuberculosis or malaria.

In order to combat this energy poverty, Barefoot designs and manufactures a range of “micro-solar” lighting products that use long-lasting, white LED technology. Recognized for high quality and affordability, Barefoot’s products are now available in 75 countries, providing over 600,000 people with alternatives to kerosene.

A unique lending approach:

Through Barefoot, Kiva is supplying loans to lighting distributors and retailers to help accelerate adoption amongst poor communities and help create more jobs. Because these loans are used to buy major shipments of product, they are often larger than the average loans on Kiva. Offered at zero-interest, this financing allows energy entrepreneurs to establish their businesses in centralized locations that have high upfront costs but higher sales volumes -- making an even bigger impact.

The partnership with Kiva will give Barefoot additional support to pursue its social objectives, including:

1) Access to electricity: Expanding access to 10 million people, or 2 million households, by 2015.

2) Job creation: Creating about 3,000 new energy entrepreneur jobs in local markets.

3) More studying: With light, students will have more hours to study, eventually leading to higher household incomes.

4) The end of kerosene: Households will save and reinvest money they would have spent on pricey kerosene -- and on medical bills for illnesses caused by its toxic fumes.

5) Saving lives: To save between 50 and 100 lives by 2013 by eliminating kerosene lamps. Between 15,000 and 40,000 people die every year from burns, often caused by kerosene. Women and children are the most common victims. 

Barefoot also has several high-level environmental objectives, including the reduction of 300,000 tons of greenhouse gases by 2015, and the reduction of toxic battery disposal. It has already made headway in both areas.

The company has shown exceptional growth, driven largely by consumer demand. Today, it has three subsidiaries based in Kenya, Uganda and Hong Kong. Its primary barrier to expansion is funding, causing some gaps in its supply chain. The partnership to Kiva is helping to fill these gaps as Barefoot enters new markets.

Because Barefoot Power’s core business is not microfinance, there is some level of additional risk for lenders. Kiva’s partnership with the company is unique and unprecedented. For this reason, Kiva has not assigned the organization a risk rating.

Repayment Performance on Kiva

    This Lending Partner All Kiva Partners
  Start Date On Kiva May 15, 2012 Oct 12, 2005
Total Loans $560,100 $2,043,632,365
Amount of raised Inactive loans $0 $314,375
Number of raised Inactive loans 0 175
Amount of Paying Back Loans $0 $159,113,005
Number of Paying Back Loans 0 191,440
Amount of Ended Loans $560,100 $1,843,318,805
Number of Ended Loans 27 2,482,233
Delinquency Rate 0.00% 12.31%
Amount in Arrears $0 $12,068,428
Outstanding Portfolio $0 $98,006,179
Number of Loans Delinquent 0 65,730
Default Rate 22.77% 1.83%
Amount of Ended Loans Defaulted $127,520 $33,658,280
Number of Ended Loans Defaulted 11 88,833
Currency Exchange Loss Rate 0.01% 0.47%
Amount of Currency Exchange Loss $42 $12,608,670
Refund Rate 0.00% 0.54%
Amount of Refunded Loans $0 $10,936,620
Number of Refunded Loans 0 9,669

Loan Characteristics On Kiva

    This Lending Partner All Kiva Partners
  Loans to Women Borrowers 21.43% 78.46%
Average Loan Size $20,004 $393
Average Individual Loan Size $21,491 $586
Average Group Loan Size $1,325 $1,910
Average number of borrowers per group 2 8.3
Average GDP per capita (PPP) in local country $1,800 $5,593
Average Loan Size / GDP per capita (PPP) 1,111.31% 7.02%
Average Time to Fund a Loan 5.63 days 9.11 days
Average Dollars Raised Per Day Per Loan $3,555.80 $43.11
  Average Loan Term 11.14 months 11.5 months

Journaling Performance on Kiva

    This Lending Partner All Kiva Partners
  Total Journals 21 1,218,131
  Journaling Rate 55.56% 41.90%
  Average Number of Comments Per Journal 0.00 0.02
  Average Number of Recommendations Per Journal 0.00 0.55

Borrowing Cost Comparison (based on 2012 data)

    This Lending Partner Median for MFI's in Country All Kiva Partners
  Average Cost to Borrower 0% APR 36.00% PY 26.44% PY
  Profitability (return on assets) N/A 0.5% -1.35%
  Average Loan Size (% of per capita income) N/A 56.00% 0.00%

Country Fast Facts

Lending Partner Staff