Intersolar’s Solar Games gives back thanks to partnership with Twende Solar

IESNA Solar Games photo

Each year at Intersolar & Energy Storage North America’s (IESNA) flagship event, the Solar Games (now accepting applicants!) electrify the exhibit hall with a high-energy, head-to-head competition among North American installer teams. However, the true power of this one-of-a-kind tournament goes far beyond the arena.

IESNA has a long-standing partnership with nonprofit organization Twende Solar. Much of the equipment used in the Solar Games is repurposed to deliver clean, reliable energy to communities in need around the world. Here’s more insight from the IESNA team:

Solar Games equipment in underserved communities

Once the final round wraps and the crowd clears, new work begins. The equipment used in the Solar Games, including modules, inverters, racking, batteries, and more, gets a second life through Twende Solar – turning temporary installations into long-term solutions for underserved communities.

Since 2015, Twende Solar has provided renewable energy systems to:

  • A medical clinic in Colombia
  • Sustainable power for an entire village in Peru
  • Remote schools in Haiti, Cambodia, and Guatemala
  • Indigenous communities in the U.S.

Tune into this special podcast episode, recorded live at the Hub during IESNA 2025, to hear insights from Twende Solar Executive Director and Solar Games Advisor, Robin Swanhuyser, and this year’s Solar Games Champions, Huston Solar, hosted by SunCast Media’s Nico Johnson.

Twende Solar in Action

One of Twende Solar’s most impactful recent projects took place at the Wogagen “First Light of the Day” School in Debre Birhan, Ethiopia.

In partnership with The Community Project: Ethiopia, Twende Solar installed an off-grid 8 kW solar energy system at Wogagen, the country’s first public K-12 STEM school. Completed in 2024, the system now powers essential educational tools including computers, projectors, microscopes, and evening classes – transforming what’s possible for more than 280 students and the wider Chole Village community.

The project’s key features include:

• Reliable, clean energy that replaced noisy diesel generators and reduced emissions
• Enhanced learning with access to modern tools and resources
• Community empowerment through a sustainable campus with a brick factory, farm, bamboo nursery, and future community center

The project was a collaborative effort between local leadership and the Ethiopian Ministry of Education. The three Ethiopian professionals trained by Twende in Oregon now help maintain the system and educate others to ensure long-term impact.

To bring this project to life, Twende Solar utilized equipment donated through the Solar Games competition, including a Sol-Ark inverter, Rolls Batteries, and Heliene solar modules. IronRidge also generously provided the racking system used in the final installation.

“Our vision is grounded in an old African proverb: ‘If you want to travel fast, go alone. If you want to travel far, go together.’”

About the Solar Games

The Solar Games is the industry’s first live solar + storage installer competition, held annually in the expo hall at IESNA Flagship. The multi-round, three-day tournament brings together elite installer teams that compete to build complete rooftop solar and storage systems.

How it works:

• Teams install rooftop solar systems in a custom-built arena with real equipment they may have never used before.
• Each round is judged on installation quality, safety, efficiency, speed, and more.
• Teams must be OSHA 10-certified, with at least one member being NABCEP-certified or a licensed electrician.
• The winning team takes home $10,000 and the glory of being crowned Solar Games Champions.

“It’s an intense experience: hundreds of people watching you from all angles with the clock running and $10K on the line; working with equipment we’ve never seen before, and judges watching your every move and taking notes as you work.”