Amy Smith: Simple designs that could save millions of childrens' lives

40,920 views ・ 2007-01-16

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:25
In terms of invention,
0
25640
1215
00:26
I'd like to tell you the tale of one of my favorite projects.
1
26880
2858
00:29
I think it's one of the most exciting that I'm working on,
2
29762
3293
00:33
but I think it's also the simplest.
3
33080
1720
00:35
It's a project that has the potential to make a huge impact around the world.
4
35160
4456
00:39
It addresses one of the biggest health issues on the planet,
5
39640
3416
00:43
the number one cause of death in children under five.
6
43080
3012
00:46
Which is ...?
7
46640
1200
00:48
Water-borne diseases? Diarrhea? Malnutrition?
8
48680
3080
00:52
No.
9
52200
1200
00:53
It's breathing the smoke from indoor cooking fires --
10
53880
3616
00:57
acute respiratory infections caused by this.
11
57520
2760
01:01
Can you believe that?
12
61040
1200
01:02
I find this shocking and somewhat appalling.
13
62880
3256
01:06
Can't we make cleaner burning cooking fuels?
14
66160
2616
01:08
Can't we make better stoves?
15
68800
1936
01:10
How is it that this can lead to over two million deaths every year?
16
70760
4016
01:14
I know Bill Joy was talking to you about the wonders of carbon nanotubes,
17
74800
4336
01:19
so I'm going to talk to you about the wonders of carbon macro-tubes,
18
79160
3816
01:23
which is charcoal.
19
83000
1216
01:24
(Laughter)
20
84240
1976
01:26
So this is a picture of rural Haiti.
21
86240
2176
01:28
Haiti is now 98 percent deforested.
22
88440
3296
01:31
You'll see scenes like this all over the island.
23
91760
3096
01:34
It leads to all sorts of environmental problems
24
94880
2776
01:37
and problems that affect people throughout the nation.
25
97680
4256
01:41
A couple years ago there was severe flooding
26
101960
2056
01:44
that led to thousands of deaths --
27
104040
1620
01:45
that's directly attributable to the fact
28
105684
1932
01:47
that there are no trees on the hills to stabilize the soil.
29
107640
2976
01:50
So the rains come --
30
110640
1256
01:51
they go down the rivers and the flooding happens.
31
111920
2440
01:55
Now one of the reasons why there are so few trees is this:
32
115440
3456
01:58
people need to cook,
33
118920
1376
02:00
and they harvest wood and they make charcoal in order to do it.
34
120320
4096
02:04
It's not that people are ignorant to the environmental damage.
35
124440
2905
02:07
They know perfectly well, but they have no other choice.
36
127369
2620
02:10
Fossil fuels are not available,
37
130013
2003
02:12
and solar energy doesn't cook the way that they like their food prepared.
38
132040
4896
02:16
And so this is what they do.
39
136960
2136
02:19
You'll find families like this who go out into the forest to find a tree,
40
139120
4176
02:23
cut it down and make charcoal out of it.
41
143320
2880
02:27
So not surprisingly,
42
147440
1216
02:28
there's a lot of effort that's been done to look at alternative cooking fuels.
43
148680
4799
02:34
About four years ago, I took a team of students down to Haiti
44
154360
3056
02:37
and we worked with Peace Corps volunteers there.
45
157440
2416
02:39
This is one such volunteer
46
159880
1416
02:41
and this is a device that he had built in the village where he worked.
47
161320
3616
02:44
And the idea was that you could take waste paper;
48
164960
2656
02:47
you could compress it
49
167640
1216
02:48
and make briquettes that could be used for fuel.
50
168880
2656
02:51
But this device was very slow.
51
171560
2016
02:53
So our engineering students went to work on it
52
173600
3096
02:56
and with some very simple changes,
53
176720
2096
02:58
they were able to triple the throughput of this device.
54
178840
3056
03:01
So you could imagine they were very excited about it.
55
181920
2536
03:04
And they took the briquettes back to MIT so that they could test them.
56
184480
3800
03:09
And one of the things that they found was they didn't burn.
57
189000
4256
03:13
So it was a little discouraging to the students.
58
193280
2776
03:16
(Laughter)
59
196080
1536
03:17
And in fact, if you look closely,
60
197640
2376
03:20
right here you can see it says, "US Peace Corps."
61
200040
2600
03:23
As it turns out, there actually wasn't any waste paper in this village.
62
203640
3816
03:27
And while it was a good use of government paperwork
63
207480
3216
03:30
for this volunteer to bring it back with him to his village,
64
210720
2905
03:33
it was 800 kilometers away.
65
213649
2087
03:35
And so we thought perhaps there might be a better way
66
215760
2896
03:38
to come up with an alternative cooking fuel.
67
218680
2200
03:41
What we wanted to do is we wanted to make a fuel
68
221640
2256
03:43
that used something that was readily available on the local level.
69
223920
3336
03:47
You see these all over Haiti as well.
70
227280
1776
03:49
They're small-scale sugar mills.
71
229080
1736
03:50
And the waste product from them
72
230840
1496
03:52
after you extract the juice from the sugarcane
73
232360
2416
03:54
is called "bagasse."
74
234800
1536
03:56
It has no other use.
75
236360
1216
03:57
It has no nutritional value, so they don't feed it to the animals.
76
237600
3296
04:00
It just sits in a pile near the sugar mill until eventually they burn it.
77
240920
4040
04:06
What we wanted to do was we wanted to find a way
78
246040
2296
04:08
to harness this waste resource and turn it into a fuel
79
248360
2976
04:11
that would be something that people could easily cook with,
80
251360
2976
04:14
something like charcoal.
81
254360
1240
04:16
So over the next couple of years,
82
256600
1616
04:18
students and I worked to develop a process.
83
258240
3656
04:21
So you start with the bagasse, and then you take a very simple kiln
84
261920
3816
04:25
that you can make out of a waste fifty five-gallon oil drum.
85
265760
3176
04:28
After some time, after setting it on fire,
86
268960
2296
04:31
you seal it to restrict the oxygen that goes into the kiln,
87
271280
3976
04:35
and then you end up with this carbonized material here.
88
275280
3000
04:39
However, you can't burn this.
89
279080
1576
04:40
It's too fine and it burns too quickly to be useful for cooking.
90
280680
4695
04:45
So we had to try to find a way to form it into useful briquettes.
91
285399
4257
04:49
And conveniently, one of my students was from Ghana,
92
289680
3416
04:53
and he remembered a dish his mom used to make for him called "kokonte,"
93
293120
3334
04:56
which is a very sticky porridge made out of the cassava root.
94
296478
3458
04:59
And so what we did was we looked,
95
299960
1576
05:01
and we found that cassava is indeed grown in Haiti,
96
301560
3096
05:04
under the name of "manioc."
97
304680
2136
05:06
In fact, it's grown all over the world --
98
306840
1953
05:08
yucca, tapioca, manioc, cassava, it's all the same thing --
99
308817
3079
05:11
a very starchy root vegetable.
100
311920
2096
05:14
And you can make a very thick, sticky porridge out of it,
101
314040
3216
05:17
which you can use to bind together the charcoal briquettes.
102
317280
4136
05:21
So we did this. We went down to Haiti.
103
321440
3176
05:24
These are the graduates of the first Ecole de Charbon,
104
324640
2656
05:27
or Charcoal Institute.
105
327320
1696
05:29
And these --
106
329040
1216
05:30
(Laughter)
107
330280
1216
05:31
That's right. So I'm actually an instructor at MIT as well as CIT.
108
331520
5976
05:37
And these are the briquettes that we made.
109
337520
2080
05:41
Now I'm going to take you to a different continent.
110
341040
2400
05:44
This is India
111
344320
1216
05:45
and this is the most commonly used cooking fuel in India.
112
345560
3216
05:48
It's cow dung.
113
348800
1376
05:50
And more than in Haiti, this produces really smoky fires,
114
350200
4176
05:54
and this is where you see the health impacts
115
354400
2456
05:56
of cooking with cow dung and biomass as a fuel.
116
356880
4080
06:01
Kids and women are especially affected by it,
117
361600
2216
06:03
because they're the ones who are around the cooking fires.
118
363840
3136
06:07
So we wanted to see
119
367000
1216
06:08
if we could introduce this charcoal-making technology there.
120
368240
3496
06:11
Well, unfortunately, they didn't have sugarcane
121
371760
2416
06:14
and they didn't have cassava,
122
374200
1381
06:15
but that didn't stop us.
123
375605
1200
06:17
What we did was we found what were the locally available sources of biomass.
124
377400
3816
06:21
And there was wheat straw and there was rice straw in this area.
125
381240
3376
06:24
And what we could use as a binder was actually small amounts of cow manure,
126
384640
3616
06:28
which they used ordinarily for their fuel.
127
388280
2240
06:31
And we did side-by-side tests,
128
391960
2176
06:34
and here you can see the charcoal briquettes
129
394160
2576
06:36
and here the cow dung.
130
396760
1216
06:38
And you can see that it's a lot cleaner burning of a cooking fuel.
131
398000
3256
06:41
And in fact, it heats the water a lot more quickly.
132
401280
2576
06:43
And so we were very happy, thus far.
133
403880
2296
06:46
But one of the things that we found
134
406200
1696
06:47
was when we did side-by-side comparisons with wood charcoal,
135
407920
2816
06:50
it didn't burn as long.
136
410760
1616
06:52
And the briquettes crumbled a little bit
137
412400
1905
06:54
and we lost energy as they fell apart as they were cooking.
138
414329
3167
06:57
So we wanted to try to find a way to make a stronger briquette
139
417520
3216
07:00
so that we could compete with wood charcoal in the markets in Haiti.
140
420760
3600
07:05
So we went back to MIT,
141
425320
2016
07:07
we took out the Instron machine
142
427360
2216
07:09
and we figured out what sort of forces you needed
143
429600
2696
07:12
in order to compress a briquette to the level
144
432320
2096
07:14
that you actually are getting improved performance out of it?
145
434440
2858
07:17
And at the same time that we had students in the lab looking at this,
146
437960
3296
07:21
we also had community partners in Haiti working to develop the process,
147
441280
6936
07:28
to improve it and make it more accessible to people in the villages there.
148
448240
5000
07:34
And after some time,
149
454160
1216
07:35
we developed a low-cost press that allows you to produce charcoal,
150
455400
4816
07:40
which actually now burns not only --
151
460240
2680
07:43
actually, it burns longer, cleaner than wood charcoal.
152
463642
3318
07:47
So now we're in a situation where we have a product,
153
467400
2536
07:49
which is actually better than what you can buy in Haiti in the marketplace,
154
469960
4296
07:54
which is a very wonderful place to be.
155
474280
2720
07:58
In Haiti alone, about 30 million trees are cut down every year.
156
478960
4736
08:03
There's a possibility of this being implemented
157
483720
2496
08:06
and saving a good portion of those.
158
486240
2296
08:08
In addition, the revenue generated from that charcoal is 260 million dollars.
159
488560
6416
08:15
That's an awful lot for a country like Haiti --
160
495000
2536
08:17
with a population of eight million
161
497560
1856
08:19
and an average income of less than 400 dollars.
162
499440
3200
08:23
So this is where we're also moving ahead with our charcoal project.
163
503680
3856
08:27
And one of the things that I think is also interesting,
164
507560
2656
08:30
is I have a friend up at UC Berkeley who's been doing risk analysis.
165
510240
4296
08:34
And he's looked at the problem of the health impacts
166
514560
3056
08:37
of burning wood versus charcoal.
167
517640
2096
08:39
And he's found that worldwide, you could prevent a million deaths
168
519760
4096
08:43
switching from wood to charcoal as a cooking fuel.
169
523880
2976
08:46
That's remarkable,
170
526880
1216
08:48
but up until now, there weren't ways to do it without cutting down trees.
171
528120
3456
08:51
But now we have a way
172
531600
1216
08:52
that's using an agricultural waste material to create a cooking fuel.
173
532840
3680
08:56
One of the really exciting things, though,
174
536960
2016
08:59
is something that came out of the trip that I took to Ghana just last month.
175
539000
3572
09:02
And I think it's the coolest thing,
176
542596
3419
09:06
and it's even lower tech than what you just saw,
177
546039
2240
09:08
if you can imagine such a thing.
178
548303
2033
09:10
Here it is.
179
550360
1216
09:11
So what is this?
180
551600
1200
09:13
This is corncobs turned into charcoal.
181
553480
2576
09:16
And the beauty of this is that you don't need to form briquettes --
182
556080
3143
09:19
it comes ready made.
183
559247
1329
09:20
This is my $100 laptop, right here.
184
560600
2856
09:23
And actually, like Nick, I brought samples.
185
563480
3016
09:26
(Laughter)
186
566520
2216
09:28
So we can pass these around.
187
568760
1760
09:32
They're fully functional, field-tested, ready to roll out.
188
572520
4084
09:36
(Laughter)
189
576628
1706
09:40
And I think one of the things
190
580520
1496
09:42
which is also remarkable about this technology,
191
582040
4216
09:46
is that the technology transfer is so easy.
192
586280
2776
09:49
Compared to the sugarcane charcoal,
193
589080
2136
09:51
where we have to teach people how to form it into briquettes
194
591240
2816
09:54
and you have the extra step of cooking the binder,
195
594080
2416
09:56
this comes pre-briquetted.
196
596520
1576
09:58
And this is about the most exciting thing in my life right now,
197
598120
2953
10:01
which is perhaps a sad commentary on my life.
198
601097
3199
10:04
(Laughter)
199
604320
2256
10:06
But once you see it, like you guys in the front row --
200
606600
2536
10:09
All right, yeah, OK.
201
609160
1216
10:10
So anyway --
202
610400
1216
10:11
(Laughter)
203
611640
2016
10:13
Here it is.
204
613680
1216
10:14
And this is, I think, a perfect example
205
614920
2456
10:17
of what Robert Wright was talking about in those non-zero-sum things.
206
617400
5216
10:22
So not only do you have health benefits,
207
622640
2496
10:25
you have environmental benefits.
208
625160
2136
10:27
But this is one of the incredibly rare situations
209
627320
3816
10:31
where you also have economic benefits.
210
631160
2336
10:33
People can make their own cooking fuel from waste products.
211
633520
3056
10:36
They can generate income from this.
212
636600
2016
10:38
They can save the money that they were going to spend on charcoal
213
638640
3136
10:41
and they can produce excess and sell it in the market
214
641800
2477
10:44
to people who aren't making their own.
215
644301
1955
10:46
It's really rare that you don't have trade-offs
216
646280
2296
10:48
between health and economics, or environment and economics.
217
648600
3216
10:51
So this is a project that I just find extremely exciting
218
651840
3736
10:55
and I'm really looking forward to see where it takes us.
219
655600
5400
11:03
So when we talk about, now, the future we will create,
220
663120
3496
11:06
one of the things that I think is necessary
221
666640
2016
11:08
is to have a very clear vision of the world that we live in.
222
668680
3960
11:13
And now, I don't actually mean the world that we live in.
223
673160
2786
11:16
I mean the world where women spend two to three hours everyday
224
676920
4096
11:21
grinding grain for their families to eat.
225
681040
2440
11:24
I mean the world where advanced building materials
226
684960
2376
11:27
means cement roofing tiles that are made by hand,
227
687360
3416
11:30
and where, when you work 10 hours a day,
228
690800
2136
11:32
you're still only earning 60 dollars in a month.
229
692960
2840
11:37
I mean the world
230
697320
1216
11:38
where women and children spend 40 billion hours a year fetching water.
231
698560
6200
11:45
That's as if the entire workforce of the state of California
232
705520
3736
11:49
worked full time for a year doing nothing but fetching water.
233
709280
4496
11:53
It's a place where, for example, if this were India,
234
713800
4336
11:58
in this room, only three of us would have a car.
235
718160
2440
12:01
If this were Afghanistan,
236
721360
1216
12:02
only one person in this room would know how the use the Internet.
237
722600
3616
12:06
If this were Zambia --
238
726240
1200
12:08
300 of you would be farmers,
239
728520
2696
12:11
100 of you would have AIDS or HIV.
240
731240
3136
12:14
And more than half of you would be living on less than a dollar a day.
241
734400
3840
12:19
These are the issues that we need to come up with solutions for.
242
739280
4736
12:24
These are the issues that we need to be training our engineers,
243
744040
3856
12:27
our designers, our business people, our entrepreneurs to be facing.
244
747920
3440
12:32
These are the solutions that we need to find.
245
752280
2696
12:35
I have a few areas that I believe are especially important that we address.
246
755000
6176
12:41
One of them is creating technologies
247
761200
2056
12:43
to promote micro-finance and micro-enterprise,
248
763280
3016
12:46
so that people who are living below the poverty line
249
766320
2856
12:49
can find a way to move out --
250
769200
1536
12:50
and that they're not doing it
251
770760
1381
12:52
using the same traditional basket making, poultry rearing, etc.
252
772165
3611
12:55
But there are new technologies and new products
253
775800
2191
12:58
that they can make on a small scale.
254
778015
2240
13:00
The next thing I believe
255
780800
1216
13:02
is that we need to create technologies for poor farmers
256
782040
4376
13:06
to add value to their own crops.
257
786440
2240
13:09
And we need to rethink our development strategies,
258
789600
2656
13:12
so that we're not promoting educational campaigns
259
792280
3256
13:15
to get them to stop being farmers,
260
795560
2376
13:17
but rather to stop being poor farmers.
261
797960
2776
13:20
And we need to think about how we can do that effectively.
262
800760
2833
13:24
We need to work with the people in these communities
263
804560
2656
13:27
and give them the resources and the tools that they need
264
807240
2856
13:30
to solve their own problems.
265
810120
1696
13:31
That's the best way to do it.
266
811840
1381
13:33
We shouldn't be doing it from outside.
267
813245
2291
13:35
So we need to create this future, and we need to start doing it now.
268
815560
4160
13:40
Thank you.
269
820240
1216
13:41
(Applause)
270
821480
5256
13:46
Chris Anderson: Thank you, incredible.
271
826760
2492
13:49
Stay here.
272
829320
1200
13:51
Tell us -- just while we see if someone has a question --
273
831360
2896
13:54
just tell us about one of the other things that you've worked on.
274
834280
3416
13:57
Amy Smith: Some of the other things we're working on
275
837720
2496
14:00
are ways to do low-cost water quality testing,
276
840240
2177
14:02
so that communities can maintain their own water systems,
277
842441
2735
14:05
know when they're working, know when they treat them, etc.
278
845200
2715
14:07
We're also looking at low-cost water-treatment systems.
279
847939
2637
14:10
One of the really exciting things is looking at solar water disinfection
280
850600
3381
14:14
and improving the ability to be able to do that.
281
854005
2560
14:17
CA: What's the bottleneck preventing this stuff getting from scale?
282
857320
3936
14:21
Do you need to find entrepreneurs, or venture capitalists,
283
861280
3256
14:24
or what do you need to take what you've got and get it to scale?
284
864560
4856
14:29
AS: I think it's large numbers of people moving it forward.
285
869440
2770
14:32
It's a difficult thing --
286
872234
1199
14:33
it's a marketplace which is very fragmented
287
873457
2007
14:35
and a consumer population with no income.
288
875488
2208
14:37
So you can't use the same models that you use in the United States
289
877720
3256
14:41
for making things move forward.
290
881000
1536
14:42
And we're a pretty small staff,
291
882560
2016
14:44
which is me.
292
884600
1216
14:45
(Laughter)
293
885840
1976
14:47
So, you know, I do what I can with the students.
294
887840
2239
14:50
We have 30 students a year go out into the field
295
890103
2239
14:52
and try to implement this and move it forward.
296
892366
2450
14:54
The other thing is you have to do things with a long time frame,
297
894840
3496
14:58
as, you know, you can't expect to get something done in a year or two years;
298
898360
3936
15:02
you have to be looking five or 10 years ahead.
299
902320
2143
15:04
But I think with the vision to do that, we can move forward.
300
904487
3200
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7