1. Trang chủ
  2. » Ngoại Ngữ

Case Study: green technology grows rural roots in least developed countries

2 246 0

Đang tải... (xem toàn văn)

THÔNG TIN TÀI LIỆU

Thông tin cơ bản

Định dạng
Số trang 2
Dung lượng 124,81 KB

Các công cụ chuyển đổi và chỉnh sửa cho tài liệu này

Nội dung

Green technology grows rural roots in least developed countriesCASE STUDY Low Carbon Green Growth Roadmap for Asia and the Pacific Cooking with the sun in Cambodia To find truly suitable

Trang 1

Green technology grows rural roots in least developed countries

CASE STUDY

Low Carbon Green Growth Roadmap for Asia and the Pacific

Cooking with the sun in Cambodia

To find truly suitable green technologies for rural communities, a survey was conducted among 97 households in

Cambodia’s Takeo Province Based on the findings that almost three quarters of them still rely on firewood for

cooking,1 the ASEM SMEs Eco-Innovation Center, an organization that builds green innovation bridges between

small- and medium-enterprises in Asia and Europe, set up a project in which locals were trained on how to

manu-facture and maintain solar cookers The project was sponsored by the Small and Medium Business Administration

of the Republic of Korea and linked with the Global Green Growth Institute country programme to encourage

small and medium-sized commercial ventures for selling solar cookers Villagers were given entrepreneur training

and assistance in setting up businesses that ideally would lead to more diverse technologies, such as solar

panels, in sunlight-affluent Cambodia

Solar lantern rental system shines many lights in Lao People's Democratic Republic2

A large proportion of the population of Lao People’s Democratic Republic lives in remote rural areas without

access to the public electricity grid For them, kerosene lamps are the only option available to light up their

dark-ness, even though many studies have shown that kerosene fuels have detrimental environmental, economic

and health impacts

In pockets across the region are tiny attempts to provide villagers without electricity safer options than kerosene

One seemingly bright prospect, solar lighting systems, has not been very successful in some countries because

of poor quality equipment or battery failures as a result of inappropriate use and irregular charging Thus

Sunla-bob Ltd., a commercial company based in the Lao People’s Democratic Republic, set out to transcend those

difficulties and prove that solar power could sustainably light up rural lives Sunlabob developed an innovative

approach for providing fee-based services for charging solar lanterns: They use a village-based charging station,

which is powered by a photovoltaic array and managed by community technicians Fees are applied to the

service delivery, including the use of the lanterns, which is reasonable and lower than the cost of kerosene

As part of the approach, a Village Energy Committee is usually established to manage, coordinate and oversee

the process of collective decision-making Sunlabob experts train the village technicians, who are assigned to

charge the lanterns, operate the solar charging stations, collect fees and maintain the system

The approach has been successfully replicated in Afghanistan, Cambodia and Uganda.3 In 2010, as part of the

regional green growth capacity development pilot for Cambodia, solar lantern rental systems were set up in two

floating villages in the Thonle Sap district, in Siem Reap Province, replicating the Lao model with assistance from

ESCAP and Sunlabob During prolonged heavy flooding in 2011, villagers stranded in their homes used the solar

lanterns for charging phones and other emergency needs The service lit up the lives so successfully, more

villag-ers are demanding the solar lantern service and the Government is looking for ways to finance expanded

cover-age

Human and animal waste fuel improved quality of life in Samoa

Relying on blueprints of bio-digester technologies from Thailand and Viet Nam, the Falelauniu community of the Faleata district of Samoa created a clean bio gas by capturing the methane from a mixture of human sanitation effluents and animal waste Introduced to the community through the Youth with a Mission NGO, the low-tech and low-cost technological approach of bio-mimicry has put vital livelihood services, like lighting, heating and access to cooking fuel, within the reach of poor community dwellers Additionally, residue from the bio-digesters was discovered to boost organic agriculture As a result, households are now making considerable savings on their energy bills and food products while increasing their incomes by selling excess produce

The pilot project set up a training and demonstration centre in the Falelauniu community and encouraged young people to acquire the skills needed to bio-digest while generating employment through a community-based cooperative that sold the gas Now the centre provides similar fee-community-based technical services to other communities replicating the pro-poor green business model.4 The pilot project has been replicated successfully

in Fiji and Vanuatu, with other Pacific countries, such as Tonga, considering it

1 Kim Da-ye, “Appropriate tech more than foreign aid tool”, Korea Times, 28 November, 2011 Available from

www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/special/2011/11/182_99623.html (accessed 25 January 2012).

2 United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific , Green Growth Capacity Development Programme (2011)

Available from www.greengrowth.org\capacity_development\capacity.html (accessed 25 January 2012).

3 United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific, Financing an Inclusive and Green Future: A Supportive

Financial System and Green Growth for Achieving the Millennium Development Goals in Asia and the Pacific (Bangkok, 2010) Available

from www.unescap.org/66/documents/Theme-Study/st-escap-2575.pdf (accessed 30 January 2012).

Trang 2

Low Carbon Green Growth Roadmap for Asia and the Pacific : Case Study - Green technology in LDCs

Cooking with the sun in Cambodia

To find truly suitable green technologies for rural communities, a survey was conducted among 97 households in

Cambodia’s Takeo Province Based on the findings that almost three quarters of them still rely on firewood for

cooking,1 the ASEM SMEs Eco-Innovation Center, an organization that builds green innovation bridges between

small- and medium-enterprises in Asia and Europe, set up a project in which locals were trained on how to

manu-facture and maintain solar cookers The project was sponsored by the Small and Medium Business Administration

of the Republic of Korea and linked with the Global Green Growth Institute country programme to encourage

small and medium-sized commercial ventures for selling solar cookers Villagers were given entrepreneur training

and assistance in setting up businesses that ideally would lead to more diverse technologies, such as solar

panels, in sunlight-affluent Cambodia

Solar lantern rental system shines many lights in Lao People's Democratic Republic2

A large proportion of the population of Lao People’s Democratic Republic lives in remote rural areas without

access to the public electricity grid For them, kerosene lamps are the only option available to light up their

dark-ness, even though many studies have shown that kerosene fuels have detrimental environmental, economic

and health impacts

In pockets across the region are tiny attempts to provide villagers without electricity safer options than kerosene

One seemingly bright prospect, solar lighting systems, has not been very successful in some countries because

of poor quality equipment or battery failures as a result of inappropriate use and irregular charging Thus

Sunla-bob Ltd., a commercial company based in the Lao People’s Democratic Republic, set out to transcend those

difficulties and prove that solar power could sustainably light up rural lives Sunlabob developed an innovative

approach for providing fee-based services for charging solar lanterns: They use a village-based charging station,

which is powered by a photovoltaic array and managed by community technicians Fees are applied to the

service delivery, including the use of the lanterns, which is reasonable and lower than the cost of kerosene

As part of the approach, a Village Energy Committee is usually established to manage, coordinate and oversee

the process of collective decision-making Sunlabob experts train the village technicians, who are assigned to

charge the lanterns, operate the solar charging stations, collect fees and maintain the system

The approach has been successfully replicated in Afghanistan, Cambodia and Uganda.3 In 2010, as part of the

regional green growth capacity development pilot for Cambodia, solar lantern rental systems were set up in two

floating villages in the Thonle Sap district, in Siem Reap Province, replicating the Lao model with assistance from

ESCAP and Sunlabob During prolonged heavy flooding in 2011, villagers stranded in their homes used the solar

lanterns for charging phones and other emergency needs The service lit up the lives so successfully, more

villag-ers are demanding the solar lantern service and the Government is looking for ways to finance expanded

cover-age

Human and animal waste fuel improved quality of life in Samoa

Relying on blueprints of bio-digester technologies from Thailand and Viet Nam, the Falelauniu community of the Faleata district of Samoa created a clean bio gas by capturing the methane from a mixture of human sanitation effluents and animal waste Introduced to the community through the Youth with a Mission NGO, the low-tech and low-cost technological approach of bio-mimicry has put vital livelihood services, like lighting, heating and access to cooking fuel, within the reach of poor community dwellers Additionally, residue from the bio-digesters was discovered to boost organic agriculture As a result, households are now making considerable savings on their energy bills and food products while increasing their incomes by selling excess produce

The pilot project set up a training and demonstration centre in the Falelauniu community and encouraged young people to acquire the skills needed to bio-digest while generating employment through a community-based cooperative that sold the gas Now the centre provides similar fee-community-based technical services to other communities replicating the pro-poor green business model.4 The pilot project has been replicated successfully

in Fiji and Vanuatu, with other Pacific countries, such as Tonga, considering it

4 United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific, Sustainable Infrastructure: Biogas in Samoa (2010) Available

from www.unescap.org/EPOC/pdf/Examples-of-Green-Growth-in-the-Pacific.pdf (accessed 20 January 2012).

Ngày đăng: 06/06/2016, 16:00

TỪ KHÓA LIÊN QUAN

TÀI LIỆU CÙNG NGƯỜI DÙNG

TÀI LIỆU LIÊN QUAN

w