Blog - Biodiesel and Sustainable Rural Technologies Program


Let it Rain!

Posted By Helen Hofman on 6.30.11 @ 1:55PM | Beacon of Hope College Projects, Education, Education, Biodiesel and Sustainable Rural Technologies Program, Beacon of Hope College, Soroti Town, Soroti; Uganda, Uganda, Church of the Redeemer

This is the first of several posts I (Helen, the Communications Director from the Seattle office) is posting from Soroti during a several week visit. The first stop of course was Beacon of Hope College, just a few minutes away from the hotel.

Director of Education Sam Ocen introduced me and several of the visiting team from Church of the Redeemer in Boston to the teachers of the science department. A science fair is being planned for this week (more on that in a later post). Then Sam showed me around the campus. We visited the just-completed rainwater harvest system, operational less than 3 weeks. The water level in the gauge, a clear plastic tube parallel to the side of a huge black tank, was too low to be seen. That meant the school had almost used up the water collected off the tin roofs of two sides of two long buildings. The city of Soroti had no water for 3 days, and this was day 3. The school survived on the water that had collected since May 31 in the two large (60,000 liters each) tanks. Over those 3 days they used about 40,000 liters total. The water came back on in Soroti, and the water was replenished during a thunderstorm on June 27. The harvesting system was finished just in time for a real life test, and it worked!

The CU-EWB team had to add gutters to the roof edges, ensuring that all were at angles for the water to collect into a main pipe that filled the tanks. They even had to hammer together their own ladders! The gutters emptied into piping that fills the storage tank; the water is filtered, and clean, free water is accessible at two spigots. The system even has an overflow system. With completion of this collection system, the school no longer has to rely exclusively on city water.
The project was two years in the making. The team made assessments during the 2009 and 2010 visits, and swung into action in May 2011. The rainwater harvesting system saves the school significant operating costs, and provides solutions for other water-related problems. Water to the school goes out several times a week, which means the students must walk 5-6 k to get well water, or the school's administration must buy water in town. This takes a lot of time away from studies, and exposes the female students to potential danger. Women, especially young ones, simply are not safe to walk around town after school hours.

Read the CU-EWB team's great blog here. Thanks to Harrison, David, Allison, and all those other CE EWB folks who took part in this. More thanks to Julius, the determined, strong and ever-inventive handyman at Beacon of Hope School! Also thanks for great photos I stole off your blog!   

Related Links: Biodiesel and Sustainable Rural Technologies Program

Pilgrim Holds Sustainable Rural Technologies Meetings at Makerere University

Posted By Helen Hofman on 5.10.11 @ 2:30PM | Teso University, Education, Biodiesel and Sustainable Rural Technologies Program, Teso University, Beacon of Hope College, Teso University Project, Kampala, Uganda, Soroti; Uganda

Dorothy Echodu spent time in Uganda last month with a team from the University of Massachusetts Amherst. The group led groundbreaking workshops in Sustainable Rural Technologies at Makerere University in Kampala. Dorothy, the Director of Pilgrim's Teso University Project, has been active in enlisting US university staff to teach sustainable technology as one of the two initial programs planned for the launching of Teso University in Teso, northern Uganda.

 The US team was led by Dr. Andy Danylchuk, and included Dr. James Webb, Dr. David Damery (Dept. of Environmental Conservation (ECO)) and Dr. Craig Hollingsworth (U Mass Extension). Dr. James Webb has been working with the Teso University Project researching and designing an environmentally friendly and economically viable aquaculture project for Teso. 

On Wednesday, Dr. David Damery, Director of the Building and Construction Technology program within ECO led the first workshop on "Green Construction in Uganda". The workshop was attended by architects, engineers, academics, and Government Ministry officials from across the capitol city. The workshop revealed that topics such as adaptive reuse and embodied energy are not foreign terms within the building construction industry in Uganda, and that there is considerable desire to use alternative construction techniques to increase the sustainability of the build environment throughout the region.

Dr. Andy Danylchuk, Asst. Professor of Fish Conservation within ECO next directed the entire team for two days of workshops entitled "Pathways for Aquaculture in Uganda". Practitioners, academics, and consultants from across the country participated in discussion, demonstrations, and strategic planning for future aquaculture development in this East Central African nation. The workshop took an integrative systems thinking approach to help identify challenges and opportunities to the aquaculture industry in Uganda. All participants were encouraged by the collective sharing of information as well as the potential role the new university in the Teso region will play in helping the aquaculture industry move forward in Uganda.

This work is generously supported by a grant from the Clarence and Anne Dillon Dunwalke Trust. 

Below are the workshop slides and a photo gallery of the Pilgrim event, plus a video Andy Danylchuk produced for FishForward's channel on YouTube. 

Other Media

Documents

Acrobat (PDF) Document

Teso Aquaculture 1
Download (4.83MB, pdf)

Acrobat (PDF) Document

Teso Aquaculture 2
Download (475Kb, pdf)

Related Links: Teso University, Biodiesel and Sustainable Rural Technologies Program