RE-NEW TT by Teocah Dove, Trinidad & Tobago (ADEL 2015)

June 4, 2021

The Native Indians in Guyana are among the country’s poorest populations. The RE NEW TT project wished to address one of the major problems the country’s Native Indian community is dealing with: the lack of access to energy. RE NEW TT installed a PV solar system at the sole indigenous people's hostel in Georgetown, Guyana which has little access to energy. This hostel is a central hub for the Native Indian community. This system is being used to meet the critical loads within the hostel. The system is also used as a training tool for the residents and villagers (over 2500 annually) in solar energy installation and maintenance. The solar panels will provide sustainable energy for the hostel for the next 30 years while RENEW TT will continuously monitor the system and evaluate it until 2023. About Teocah: Ms Teocah Arieal Ainka Dove is a Social Extrapreneur and Social-Impact Storyteller. Teocah’s diverse expertise has seen her serving in leadership positions in the international development sector over the last ten (10) years either communicating on, designing, providing technical direction on, implementing and/or managing development programmes. With well-honed innovative and leadership capacities and a knack for information and communication technology for social change, Teocah dedicates her efforts in the Caribbean as an interdisciplinary consultant with development organisations, through her eponymous foundation and as a pro bono advisor with civil society. Teocah works collaboratively with governments, development organisations, non-profits, and public and private sector institutions, to develop synergies for social change, creating facilitating platforms to harness and leverage the creative combinations of ideas, people, communities and resources to create shared value. Teocah’s work centres around human-centred solutions to social change through action research, evidence-based policies and programmes, innovative human and social development interventions, social and behaviour change communication, capacity development, stakeholder networking and philanthropy. Presently, Teocah works with the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH where she serves as the Communication and Visibility Advisor for the 11th European Development Fund (EDF) Technical Assistance Programme for Sustainable Energy in the Caribbean (TAPSEC) leading the implementation of a high-impact communication, public relations and digital marketing strategy articulating the Caribbean’s transition to a low-carbon, sustainable and climate-resilient region. A British Chevening scholar, Teocah holds an MSc in Gender and International Relations from the University of Bristol, a (BA Hons) Media and Communications from the University of Greenwich and an AAS in Journalism and Public Relations from the College of Science Technology and Applied Arts of Trinidad and Tobago. Teocah is presently an MSt Social Innovation candidate at the University of Cambridge.

Speakers

RELATED CONTENT

  • Authors
    May 22, 2026
    This paper, the fourth in a research series on services-led growth in the Global South, examines Egypt’s potential for growth and economic transformation through the integration of services into Global Value Chains (GVCs). It employs a new taxonomy that classifies services into Knowledge Services (KS), Enabling Services (ES), and Local Services (LS) and applies OECD 2025 Trade in Value-Added (TiVA), Trade in Employment (TiM), and input-output databases to benchmark Egypt against Mor ...
  • Authors
    May 15, 2026
    This paper is the third in a series of country and comparative studies that together comprise a research program on services as drivers of economic growth and structural transformation in the Global South. The paper analyzes the pattern of Tunisia's services-led economic growth from 2012- 2022 using a specialized three-category framework: knowledge services (KS), enabling services (ES), and local services (LS). Using data from the OECD Trade in Value Added (TiVA), Trade in Employmen ...
  • May 15, 2026
    In this podcast recorded during the Growth Summit, Naomi Kengurungu, Director of Marketing and Communication at the African Management Institute, discusses the key conditions needed for h ...
  • May 14, 2026
    In this episode of Africafé, Neema CHUSSI discusses the opportunities and challenges artificial intelligence presents for Africa. She highlights the need for the continent to develop its own AI governance approach, rooted in African democratic values, while addressing critical issues su...
  • May 6, 2026
    Dans cette interview, l’évolution de la politique industrielle marocaine est analysée : planification étatique (1960–1980), libéralisation (1980–1990), puis intégration dans les chaînes de valeur mondiales (à partir des années 2000). Aujourd’hui, face au protectionnisme et au nearshorin...
  • April 14, 2026
    Cet épisode met en avant les industries automobile et aéronautique du Maroc en tant que moteurs de transformation industrielle, portées par le Pacte pour l’Émergence et le Plan d’Accélération Industrielle. Un écosystème solide composé de donneurs d’ordre, de fabricants internationaux et...
  • April 13, 2026
    Résumé exécutif stratégiqueLe Maroc s’est engagé avec détermination dans une trajectoire de modernisation fondée sur la transition numérique, la transition verte et l’innovation. Ces dynamiques sont devenues des leviers stratégiques pour la compétitivité, l’attractivité et la création d’emplois à forte valeur ajoutée. Pourtant, l’analyse des données microéconomiques récentes révèle un paradoxe préoccupant : les entreprises les plus modernisées, moteurs de la croissance de demain, re ...
  • March 31, 2026
    تتناول هذه الحلقة كيفية إعادة صياغة السياسة الصناعية في المغرب في ظل التحولات العالمية وإعادة تشكيل سلاسل القيمة، مع التركيز على الانتقال من موقع إنتاجي إلى فاعل صناعي استراتيجي. كما تسلط الضوء على دور قطاعات السيارات والطاقات المتجددة والصناعات التكنولوجية في تعزيز تموقع المغرب دولياً....
  • Authors
    March 12, 2026
    Historically, manufacturing has served as the primary pathway to economic development, offering strong scale economies, learning-by-doing effects, and the capacity to generate the foreign exchange necessary to import capital goods and technology. However, advances in robotization and artificial intelligence (AI) are fundamentally undermining manufacturing’s traditional role, making it increasingly skill- and capital-intensive while limiting its ability to absorb labor. Thi ...