Barefoot College and Microformers shine as innovative power solutions
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Wherever you live, electricity is an increasing expense. In the developing world, communities have seen this challenge and taken their energy needs into their own hands.
Long-term planning for lightning energy change:
聽According to The Guardian, .
Barefoot College launched its solar power course for women in 2005, and already more than 150 women from 28 countries have been trained in electrical and solar engineering. , saving 1.5 million liters (396,258 gallons) of kerosene and minimizing its negative health effects in homes.
Barefoot College uses technology that is simple so people with low levels of education can use it and earn an income by assisting their fellow community members in installing the solar panels.
Entrepreneurship for collaborative power energy change:
聽At the University of Wisconsin at Madison, three budding entrepreneurs 鈥 Dan Ludois, Jonathan Lee, and Patricio Medoza Araya 鈥 are using recycled parts of old household microwaves to create the 鈥 a device that can multiply the low-wattage from a developing country's electrical grid and provide enough electricity to power a few lights, a small refrigerator, and other small electronics on an ongoing basis.
But, there鈥檚 a problem: cost. Though this mini-transformer cuts the price tag of a traditional transformer by a great deal, the $60 price tag may still be a tough sell in some ares. For middle-income families in developing countries, it may be affordable. For most people living in poverty, it's out of reach.
, tweaking their design, and offering free online instruction seminars to ensure that as many people as possible can benefit from their work. One way they can do that is by collaborating with institutions like Barefoot College and others working on energy access to nurture their shared passions 鈥 pulling people out of poverty.
In the right light, the right partnership can create something extraordinary.
鈥 at , a blog published by .
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