. Space Travel News .




.
WATER WORLD
Kenya project: making safer water to sell carbon credits
by Staff Writers
Kakamega (AFP) June 30, 2011

To protect the environment and improve the health of four million people while making a profit is the goal of a Swiss-based company distributing water filters and aiming to sell carbon credits.

Mikkel Vestergaard Frandsen's family firm has invested $30 million (20.7 million euros) in a programme to distribute 900,000 water purifiers in Kenya's Western Province, which will reduce environmental pollution by avoiding the need to burn wood and boil water.

The technology given free to local people is known as the LifeStraw, which is a plastic kit fitted with a filter that eliminates more than 99 percent of bacteria, viruses and parasites in water from wells and from streams.

In recent months, with the help of 4,000 Kenyan public health workers, the Danish-run Vestergaard Frandsen company equipped almost 90 percent of the 900,000 households in Western province, reaching almost 4.5 million residents.

The aim is to ensure that 60 percent of the households affected no longer have any need to boil their water to purify it and thus reduce the carbon gas emissions, earning Vestergaard Frandsen carbon credits to sell.

The scheme depends on a system of collecting information from each worker who installs a LifeStraw and must transmit, over a mobile phone, the name and photo of the recipient, the number of people in the household and the satellite (GPS) coordinates of the house.

"We're giving every house a water filter and educating in the use of (it) and the need for drinking safe water," Vestergaard Frandsen told AFP. "As a result of this, we anticipate that the use of boiling water will go down. When boiling water reduces, less firewood is burnt and that means less CO2 emissions."

"It's a massive investment for our company (...) We obviously need a revenue stream. That revenue comes from the reduced boiling water and the reduced burning of firewood. We actually expect to have a CO2 emission reduction for two to 2.5 million tonnes per year which we're going to sell on the voluntary carbon credit market," he added.

"We're a business, and we've been very fortunate to build a business around the opportunity to save lives. It's a full profit enterprise."

In a village on the outskirts of Kakamega, Vestergaard Frandsen carried out a swift tour of inspection, but while the project has been widely welcomed, unexpected difficulties do arise.

Saouda Rajab, 27, took her courage in both hands to ask whether the filtered water acted as a contraceptive.

"Is it true it is used for family planning?" she asked. "Can you show me what's inside (the plastic tube). Old people fear that these wazungu (white people) put something in it to kill us... Those are rumours from the old people."

Vestergaard Frandsen explained that the rumours are groundless and promised to show the filter without its plastic casing within the next two weeks. He then decided to step up his village-by-village awareness campaigns to keep on hammering the message that the Lifestraw has no such side effects and to allay fears.

The company is playing for high stakes. Its financial success depends on the widespread adoption of the kit by the villagers.

The project must also undergo an independent audit carried out by a firm with the approval of the Gold Standard, a label for trade in carbon credits under which LifeStraw is registered.

The audit will "evaluate how much CO2 would have been produced in the absence of the project, and then the real emissions will be measured once the project is in place," said Emmanuel Fages, an analyst of the carbon market, who accepts that "measuring carbon is not an exact science."

For his part, Vestergaard Frandsen plans to pursue his work on the ground until the audit is carried out.

"At the end of the year, we will be in a position to measure our 2011 worth in carbon credits, whose market value oscillates between six and 10 euros per tonne," he told AFP, before adding that he has made an advance deal worth 1.8 million tonnes with the US bank JP Morgan Chase.




Related Links
Water News - Science, Technology and Politics

.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries






. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



WATER WORLD
Landscape coefficients prove useful for urban water conservation efforts
College Station TX (SPX) Jun 27, 2011
Although water consumption and conservation are widely recognized as significant environmental concerns in the United States, most Americans are still unaware of the major impact of landscape irrigation on their regional water supplies. One startling example: a 2004 study of homeowners in College Station, Texas, estimated that more than 24 to 34 million gallons of excess water were used an ... read more


WATER WORLD
Parallel Ariane 5 launch campaigns keep up Arianespace's 2011 mission pace

Ariane 5 payload integration underway; First Soyuz launchers arrive

Arianespace to launch Astra 5B satellite

Arianespace receives the next Ariane 5 for launch in 2011

WATER WORLD
Opportunity Getting Closer to Endeavour Crater

NASA Mars Rover Arrives in Florida After Cross-Country Flight

Radar for Mars Gets Flight Tests at NASA Dryden

19-Mile Mark See Opportunity For A Solar Panel Clean Up

WATER WORLD
ARTEMIS Spacecraft Prepare for Lunar Orbit

LRO Showing Us the Moon as Never Before

CMU and Astrobotic Technology Complete Structural Assembly of Lunar Lander

Blood Red Moon Predicted

WATER WORLD
SOFIA Successfully Observes Challenging Pluto Occultation

You Can Hunt for Icy Worlds

Public Invited to Find Destination for New Horizons

'Dwarf planet' is covered in crystal ice

WATER WORLD
Microlensing Finds a Rocky Planet

A golden age of exoplanet discovery

CoRoT's new detections highlight diversity of exoplanets

Rage Against the Dying of the Light

WATER WORLD
NASA Will Compete Space Launch System (SLS) Boosters

Europe to build space re-entry vehicle

ESA high-thrust engine takes next step

Rocketdyne J-2X Engine Ready for Test

WATER WORLD
China to launch new communication satellite

China's second moon orbiter Chang'e-2 goes to outer space

Building harmonious outer space to achieve inclusive development

China's Fengyun-3B satellite goes into official operation

WATER WORLD
Dawn Nears Start of Year-Long Stay at Giant Asteroid

Hyperactive Hartley 2

Scientist analyzes the nucleus of comet Hartley 2

Pan-STARRS Telescope Finds New Distant Comet


Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News
.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2011 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement