He told BBC World Service: 'It's a divine light. God gave the sun to everyone, and light is for everyone. Whoever wants it saves money. You can't get an electric shock from it, and it doesn't cost a penny.'
Mr Moser earned a few dollars installing the lights in his local super market and neighbours' houses but his invention has not made him a wealthy man.
He said: 'There was one man who installed the lights and within a month he had saved enough to pay for the essential things for his child, who was about to be born. Can you imagine?'
Carmelinda his wife said her husband has always been handy at home and have made tables and chairs.
Illac Angelo Diaz, executive director of the MyShelter Foundation in thePhilippinesalso admires Mr Moser's ingenuity.
The charity uses recycled materials to build houses and has plenty of bottle donations, which it fills with mud to build walls and water to create windows.
It now incorporates water bottles in roofs since learning of the Moser method and also trains local people to do the same in order to earn a small living.
Moser lamps have reportedly been fitted in over 140,000 homes in the Philippineswhere a quarter of the population live in poverty, as well as in 15 other countries, includingArgentina,IndiaandFiji.
Mr Diaz believes over one million people have installed Moser lights in 2013 and credits the mechanic with transforming people's lives.
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