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#1 2009-10-05 3:14 pm

radarman
Member
Registered: 2005-02-28
Posts: 3638

This is what we need to be encouraging in the third world

http://edition.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/afric … index.html

(CNN)  -- William Kamkwamba dreamed of powering his village with the only resource that was freely available to him.
William stands at the top of one of his windmills.

William Kamkwamba fits a lightbulb to a house in his village in Malawi.

His native Malawi had gone through one of its worst droughts seven years ago, killing thousands. His family and others were surviving on one meal a day. The red soil in his Masitala hometown was parched, leaving his father, a farmer, without any income.

But amid all the shortages, one thing was still abundant.

Wind.

"I wanted to do something to help and change things," he said. "Then I said to myself, 'If they can make electricity out of wind, I can try, too.'"

Kamkwamba was kicked out of school when he couldn't pay $80 in school fees, and he spent his days at the library, where a book with photographs of windmills caught his eye.

"I thought, this thing exists in this book, it means someone else managed to build this machine," he said.

Armed with the book, the then-14-year-old taught himself to build windmills. He scoured through junkyards for items, including bicycle parts, plastic pipes, tractor fans and car batteries. For the tower, he collected wood from blue-gum trees.

"Everyone laughed at me when I told them I was building a windmill. They thought I was crazy," he said. "Then I started telling them I was just playing with the parts. That sounded more normal."

That was 2002. Now, he has five windmills, the tallest at 37 feet. He built one at an area school that he used to teach classes on windmill-building.

The windmills generate electricity and pump water in his hometown, north of the capital, Lilongwe. Neighbors regularly trek across the dusty footpaths to his house to charge their cellphones. Others stop by to listen to Malawian reggae music blaring from a radio.

Now THAT is some real ingenuity, and the kind of thinking we need to encourage.

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#2 2009-10-05 4:53 pm

Pariah
James Carville Fan..
From: Belly Of The Beast, Oklahoma!
Registered: 2001-05-24
Posts: 18426

Re: This is what we need to be encouraging in the third world

Lets send more junk to Africa!


"and it's not surprising that they get bitter, they cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren't like them or anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations."
Barack Obama

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#3 2009-10-05 4:59 pm

JakeTheTall
Cargo Cultist
From: In Permanent Opposition
Registered: 2003-03-13
Posts: 9622

Re: This is what we need to be encouraging in the third world

That's not what is needed to help "the third world," it a reduction of corruption that is needed.


Jesus said to the servants, "Fill the jars with water"; so they filled them to the brim.  Then he told them, "Now draw some out and take it to the master of the banquet."  They did so, and the master of the banquet tasted the water that had been turned into wine. He did not realize where it had come from, though the servants who had drawn the water knew.

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#4 2009-10-05 5:59 pm

[Tycho?]
As Elusive As Doubt
From: May the best sentience win
Registered: 2000-06-19
Posts: 3210

Re: This is what we need to be encouraging in the third world

While definitely cool, this sort of power generation will not suffice for any sort of industrial capacity, and will struggle even with things like electric stoves, refrigerators and washing machines. A windmill to run some lights here and there isn't going to greatly improve the lives of people.

Frankly, this makes more sense here in the West, where we have an obscene amount of junk floating around anyway. Here the windmills would take a small amount of pressure of already over-exerted energy grids, and it also makes people feel are warm inside that they're doing something "green" and trying to live off the grid.


I could bore you with a philosophical tirade about freedom and tyranny, or try and explain to you what new horizons are suddenly open to me, but I doubt you would understand and if you did it might frighten you.  That amuses me.

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