Amsterdam, the Netherlands - Marking UNESCO's International Day of Light, the Signify Foundation announced today that it has enabled access to light for 14.8 million people globally since 2017. The Foundation’s 2025 Annual Report emphasizes the critical role of sustainable lighting in building safer, healthier, and more thriving communities worldwide.
Community lighting remains underfunded and overlooked in development planning, despite its proven contribution to safer streets, better health outcomes, and stronger resilience. Today, the Foundation is calling on state actors, governments, finance institutions and the private sector to treat sustainable lighting as core infrastructure and to fund, maintain and govern it accordingly.
In 2025 the Foundation’s initiatives covered 22 projects in 19 countries, with women and girls making up 52% of beneficiaries.
For over 600 million people worldwide, darkness still limits daily life. By extending a community's active hours, lighting provides more than just visibility; it enhances safety, dignity, and economic opportunity. Alongside lighting, the Foundation's Brighter Communities Program delivers training in energy efficiency, systems installation and maintenance. The program operates across three key areas:
Brighter Learning: giving children safe spaces to learn and play after dark by lighting more than 1,000 schools, children’s homes, and playgrounds.
Brighter Health: helping improve the quality of care by providing reliable lighting to 161 hospitals, health centers, and clinics.
Brighter Living: making streets and shared spaces safer by lighting 152 villages and informal settlements.
These projects directly contribute to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, with a focus on SDG 3 (Good Health and Well-Being), SDG 4 (Quality Education), SDG 5 (Gender Equality), SDG 7 (Affordable and Clean Energy) and SDG 11 (Sustainable Cities and Communities).
From grants to lasting resilient systems
The Foundation’s experience points to a critical lesson: lighting infrastructure in underserved areas only succeeds when it is owned by the local community after it is installed. Signify Foundation is therefore focused on approaches that strengthen local capacity, attract complementary public and private investment, and ensure systems are maintained for the long-term.
The Palabek Refugee settlement project in Uganda, delivered in partnership with UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency shows how this works in practice. Community discussions revealed how lighting placements could better reflect the way residents used shared spaces. Residents were trained to install, maintain, and protect the systems themselves with clear roles and accountability in place. This approach gave them new, employable skills and a direct stake in the infrastructure they built together. After more than one year of installation, nearly 100% of the lighting systems at Palabek remain operational.
Strengthening collaboration for long-term impact
The Uganda project proves that community participation and local ownership secure the long-term sustainability of infrastructure.
Detailed findings from the 2025 initiatives are available in the Signify Foundation’s 2025 Annual Report.
Signify (Euronext: LIGHT) is the world leader in lighting for professionals, consumers and the Internet of Things. Our Philips products, Interact systems and data-enabled services deliver business value and transform life in homes, buildings and public spaces. In 2024, we had sales of EUR 6.1 billion, approximately 29,000 employees and a presence in over 70 countries. We unlock the extraordinary potential of light for brighter lives and a better world. We have been in the Dow Jones Sustainability World Index since our IPO for eight consecutive years and have achieved the EcoVadis Platinum rating for five consecutive years, placing Signify in the top one percent of companies assessed. News from Signify can be found in the Newsroom, on X, LinkedIn and Instagram. Information for investors is located on the Investor Relations page.
