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Jan
12

Solar energy, a panacea for Africa

On Tuesday, January 12 , 2010 | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Solar energy is to me the panacea for Africa, a continent where 550 million people still lack electricity. With molten salts, concentrating solar could bring light to these populations during important parts of the night.

Solar cookers could also help fighting deforestation by removing the need for fuelwood. Now an experiment run in Benin (West Africa) shows that pumps using solar PV panels are bringing several improvements to local populations.

Drip irrigation systems need pumps to operate. To date, they are using engines running on kerosene. The Solar Electric Light Fund (SELF) believes solar could replace them.

Drip irrigation systems are crucial to ensure a secure food supply to many sub-Saharan countries like Benin. Enabling them to run on solar is a fantastic way to enable them to feed themselves in the most sustainable way.

Here is the conclusion of the article published in Science Daily :

(d)espite higher up-front costs, using solar power to pump water can be more economically sustainable in the long run than irrigation systems that run on liquid fuels, such as gasoline, diesel or kerosene.

“When considering the energy requirements for expanded irrigation in rural Africa, photovoltaic drip irrigation systems have an additional advantage over liquid-fuel-based systems in that they provide emissions-free pumping power,” they added.

“Overall, this study thus indicates that solar-powered drip irrigation can provide substantial economic, nutritional and environmental benefits,” the authors said.

“With the proper support, successful widespread adoption of photovoltaic drip irrigation systems could be an important source of poverty alleviation and food security in the marginal environments common to sub-Saharan Africa.”

Here is a 10 minute video with a segment on a similar project also run by SELF :

YouTube Preview Image

After watching this great video you might be willing to give money to this NGO. Please note that giving $100 (less than 70€) you will enable six or seven families of Africa, Asia or Latin America to have access to solar electricity.

Bringing electricity to Africa, one village at a time.

Related posts:

  1. World Bank funds solar projects in North Africa
  2. The panacea to our energy and climate problems
  3. 90 percent of Israeli households have solar water heaters
  4. Solar PV to provide 300 MW to France by 2011
  5. In 2006, solar thermal progressed steadily in the EU
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1 Comments

1

It is a useful information about drip irrigation. I am a farmer and we have very large fields, before drip
irrigation system was found it was a nightmare to irrigate all those fields because where i live is a place
that does not rain so much. Now we use drip irrigation, saving so many water and it is a lot easier to irrigate
the field with that. I am trying to read everything about drip irrigation and i recommend every farmer to use that
technique, so i am grateful for everyone who gives information about it. I also found a very good guide about drip
irrigation and it may be useful too for those who want to learn more information about that;

http://agricultureguide.org/

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Water and air, the two essential fluids on which all life depends, have become global garbage cans. — Jacques Cousteau