Mobile Technology

WakaWaka Power charges your phone and tablet using solar energy

WakaWaka Power charges your phone and tablet using solar energy
The WakaWaka Power can recharge a smartphone or provide reading light after a day in the sun
The WakaWaka Power can recharge a smartphone or provide reading light after a day in the sun
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A computer rendering showing a black version of the WakaWaka Power
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A computer rendering showing a black version of the WakaWaka Power
The WakaWaka Power adds an extra two hours to the life of your tablet on a full day's charge
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The WakaWaka Power adds an extra two hours to the life of your tablet on a full day's charge
The WakaWaka Power uses a new kind of solar panel which is 20 percent more efficient than other devices
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The WakaWaka Power uses a new kind of solar panel which is 20 percent more efficient than other devices
The WakaWaka Power with its kickstand out
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The WakaWaka Power with its kickstand out
An exploded view of the WakaWaka Power
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An exploded view of the WakaWaka Power
The WakaWaka Power can recharge a smartphone or provide reading light after a day in the sun
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The WakaWaka Power can recharge a smartphone or provide reading light after a day in the sun
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Last year a portable solar LED lamp called the WakaWaka Light – a winner of four Accenture Innovation awards in 2012 – was successfully crowd-funded. Now, its makers are launching a follow-up device that can fully recharge a phone or fuel your tablet for an extra couple of hours on a single day's charge.

The WakaWaka Power has been redesigned in collaboration with a team of engineers at chip-manufacturer Intivation to be both thinner and lighter than the WakaWaka Light – Intivation's power management technology is used in more than 90 percent of the solar powered mobile phones in the world.

Up to 23 percent of the sun's energy is collected by the unit's Sunpower Solar Cell, which differs from standard cells by positioning the metallic grid on the back, allowing more light to be absorbed up front. In addition, the LED lamp provides up to 40 hours of reading light on a single day's charge (10 hours if you charge your phone), and the 2200 mAH LiPo battery will store a charge for up to four months.

You charge your iPhone5, BlackBerry, or Samsung devices from the unit via USB.

The WakaWaka Power with its kickstand out
The WakaWaka Power with its kickstand out

The WakaWaka Power has already reached more than 50 percent of its crowd-funding goals in its first day, and the company is sweetening the deal with some refreshing social activism. For every unit pre-sold, the company will donate one of last year's lamp-only models to families in Haiti who live without power. This follows the company's previous effort, which donated 800 lamps to students in Kenya.

According to WakaWaka's founder Camille van Gestel, an average of 16,000 people are injured every day by kerosene torches, the fuel for which also costs them up to 20 percent of their daily income. The WakaWaka Light can provide enough light on a single day's charge to last them several nights, and reports have shown students with solar lamps perform better than those who rely on kerosene torches.

The company expects to price the retail version of the WakaWaka Power at US$79 starting in May. You can watch the Kickstarter pitch video below.

Source: GetWakaWaka via Kickstarter

View gallery - 6 images
5 comments
5 comments
Hamstermiester
Dear Wakawaka team,
You guys rock!!!! Fantastic effort and awesome results! Literally power to the people...!! May you have many more years of great success and more innovation.
Starting to look like "a pc on every desk"
WakaWaka
Hi Hamstermiester, We've just reached an absolute amazing $100.000 on kickstarter in just a few days. Whole succes of the crowdfunding campaign is because of the support we get from ppl like yourself so Thnx for the support!
kellory
Not bad! I like it! A little pricier than I had hoped for, but it looks like you deliver pretty well.
Gabriel Do A
hi, since a device that can recharge cellphones/tablets (using sunlight) was created, (Technically) isn't it possible to create a solar posered device with a plug to be able to plug anything into it?
Michael Chaisson
Great now where can you buy one and how much will it cost?