Solar-powered phone boxes

The first London telephone box to be transformed into a free, solar-powered mobile phone charger has been unveiled  on Tottenham Court Road in London.

The first solar box (green) which contains a mobile phone charger and is transformed from a used traditional red London telephone box near Tottenham Court Road Station in London, Britain. This solar powered telephone box was launched to provide a free mobile phone charger facility to local people
The first solar box (green) which contains a mobile phone charger and is transformed from a used traditional red London telephone box near Tottenham Court Road Station in London, Britain. This solar powered telephone box was launched to provide a free mobile phone charger facility to local people

The solar-panelled phone boxes provide a clean, carbon-neutral source of energy for phones, tablets, cameras and other devices. Costs are covered through in-booth advertising space enabling the public to power-up free of charge. A new company Solarbox is using this first installation as a pilot before turning more phone boxes green early next year.

London Mayor Boris Johnson said: “In our modern world, where hardly any Londoner is complete without a raft of personal electronic gizmos in hand, it’s about time our iconic phone boxes were updated for the 21st century, to be more useful, more sustainable, and just as striking with a marvellous new green makeover.

“As London’s low-carbon economy grows, its new start-ups like this, with or funding and support, that are keeping London at the forefront of future technology.”

Solarbox is the brainchild of recent LSE graduates Kirsty Kenney and Harold Craston, who won £5,000 and mentoring support as runners-up in the Mayor’s 2014 Low-Carbon Entrepreneur competition this summer.

London’s rapidly growing low carbon goods and services sector is worth around £25 billion a year to the UK economy, and employs more than 160,000 people. The Mayor’s Low-Carbon Entrepreneur competition invites student entrepreneurs to generate and pitch their carbon-busting business ideas to a panel of expert judges.