TaTEDO – Sustainable Energy Services
Organization (TaTEDO SESO), in collaboration with Sustainable Energy Services
Company Limited (SESCOM), successfully hosted international participants from the
JustGESI programme for a high-impact learning visit at its premises in Dar es
Salaam, Tanzania, on April 22, 2026. Participants from institutions across the UK,
Malawi, Ethiopia, Mozambique, and Kenya are working on Work Package 1 of the
Mainstreaming Gender Equality and Social Inclusion for a Just Energy Transition
in Ethiopia, Malawi, Mozambique, and Tanzania project (JustGESI), which focuses
on understanding GESI barriers to eCooking access in partner countries and
designing seed funding initiatives to harness the skills of women and
marginalised groups to drive a Just Energy Transition.
TaTEDO-SESO serves as a local
institutional partner for the JustGESI project. The visit focused on TaTEDO-SESO/SESCOM's
ongoing efforts in supporting eCooking in the country and strategies to
transition households from cooking with biomass fuels to electric cooking. The visit provided a unique opportunity for
participants to experience firsthand Tanzania’s practical progress in
accelerating access to modern, clean cooking solutions, particularly electric
cooking (eCooking), through inclusive, market-based approaches.
From Policy to Practice: A Living
Model of eCooking in Action
The
visit was officially opened with welcome remarks from the CEO of TaTEDO
SESO and
the Board Chairperson of SESCOM, who emphasized the organization’s
commitment to ensuring that clean energy transitions are inclusive, equitable,
and grounded in real market solutions.
Participants were introduced to SESCOM
as the implementation social enterprise that translates national policies, strategies,
research, and development initiatives into tangible services, products, and
measurable impact for households and institutions across Tanzania.
Showcasing a Scalable Business Model
for eCooking
A comprehensive presentation delivered
by the SESCOM Manager, Ms Katarina Aloyce, highlighted the organization’s
journey in building a viable eCooking market in Tanzania. The session covered:
- Development of a market-based eCooking
business model
- Distribution through women-led sales
networks and community groups
- Deployment of over 23,000 electric
cooking appliances since 2019
- Innovative financing approaches,
including VICOBA/SACCOS models and on-bill financing pilots with TANESCO
- Addressing socio-cultural barriers
through behaviour change, demonstrations, and localized product design
The presentation also candidly
addressed key challenges, including affordability, grid reliability, and supply
chain constraints, while emphasizing critical lessons for scaling eCooking
across Africa.
Hands-On Learning: Bringing eCooking
to Life
The participants observed live
demonstrations of SESCOM eCooking appliances, particularly electric pressure cookers
(EPCs), and learned about how SESCOM handles the distribution of these
technologies. The highlight of the visit was an interactive, hands-on
demonstration session in which participants engaged directly with electric
cooking technologies. Participants observed and actively participated in:
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- Cooking a variety of local Tanzanian
dishes using Electric Pressure Cookers (EPCs)
- Preparing meals using air fryers,
showcasing healthier and energy-efficient cooking methods
- Understanding time and cost savings
compared to traditional cooking fuels
- Exploring after-sales services,
including maintenance, spare parts, and technician support networks
Importantly, several participants had
the opportunity to personally cook with an electric pressure cooker and air
fryer, gaining practical insight into usability, efficiency, and adaptability
to local cooking practices.
Experiencing the Impact: Food,
Interaction, and Shared Learning
In a powerful demonstration of
real-world application, participants enjoyed a lunch prepared entirely using
electric cooking appliances. This experience reinforced the practicality and
reliability of eCooking solutions in everyday settings.

The visit also included interactive
question-and-answer sessions, allowing for rich exchanges on:
- Gender dynamics in household energy
decision-making
- Strategies for scaling adoption among
low-income communities
- Financing models and partnerships
- Opportunities for replication in other
countries
The structured programme ensured a
seamless flow from arrival to departure, combining technical learning with
experiential engagement.
Strengthening Global Learning and
Collaboration
The JustGESI learning visit
underscored the importance of peer-to-peer exchange and practical exposure in
advancing the just energy transition. As
one participant underscored, the visit demonstrated that:
“Electric cooking is no longer a
concept in Tanzania—it is a growing, scalable market driven by real businesses,
real partnerships, and real impact.”
and “TATEDO-SESO’s work is inspiring:
their work is grounded in deep, contextual understanding of the communities
they serve. They didn’t just start delivering eCooking technologies, they
worked with the most vulnerable to understand how their needs can be met and to
deliver modern, clean energy solutions.” The experience provided valuable
lessons for adapting similar approaches in other countries, particularly in
integrating gender equality, social inclusion, and market-driven delivery
models. The JustGESI team left TATEDO-SESO’s premises filled with enthusiasms
and insights that they will translate into actions plans as they start planning
and designing seed funding initiatives to support eCooking projects in their
countries.
Looking Ahead: Scaling Impact Across
Africa
Scaling up JustGESI across Africa
involves replicating its proven, localized approach by bridging skills gaps to
increase the participation of women and disadvantaged groups, fostering
inclusive economic growth, using community engagement to ensure projects are
relevant to local experiences, and providing seed funding for community-driven
eCooking projects and identifying barriers for marginalized households. Other
interventions include working with local leaders as "gender champions"
to influence local decision-making and technology uptake for disadvantaged
groups in rural areas. This will ensure eCooking transitions are equitable. TaTEDO
SESO and SESCOM reaffirmed their commitment to:
- Expanding access to affordable,
reliable electric cooking solutions
- Strengthening partnerships with
utilities, financial institutions, and development partners
- Advancing innovative financing models
to overcome affordability barriers
- Promoting gender-responsive approaches
to energy access
- Supporting regional and continental
scale-up through shared learning platforms such as JUSTGESI
A Milestone in Tanzania’s Clean
Cooking Journey
The successful hosting of the JUSTGESI
international participants marks another important milestone in Tanzania’s
leadership in clean cooking innovation.
The engagement with JustGESI project
partners highlighted TaTEDO-SESO/SESCOM’s leadership in eCooking efforts and
reinforced the importance of inclusive energy transitions. TaTEDO-SESO/SESCOM’s
eight-year experience in eCooking aligns with JustGESI's goals of advancing
gender-equitable and socially inclusive energy access. The visit supported
knowledge exchange and partnership development, paving the way for scalable,
sustainable solutions. Future work will focus on integrating social and gender equity
into eCooking through the implementation of the flagship project for
mainstreaming GESI in the eCooking interventions.
By combining policy leadership,
business innovation, and practical implementation, TaTEDO SESO and SESCOM
continue to demonstrate that a just and inclusive energy transition is not only
verbally possible but also already underway.

