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

40,222 views ・ 2007-01-16

TED


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00:25
In terms of invention,
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I'd like to tell you the tale of one of my favorite projects.
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I think it's one of the most exciting that I'm working on,
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but I think it's also the simplest.
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It's a project that has the potential to make a huge impact around the world.
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It addresses one of the biggest health issues on the planet,
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the number one cause of death in children under five.
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Which is ...?
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Water-borne diseases? Diarrhea? Malnutrition?
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No.
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It's breathing the smoke from indoor cooking fires --
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acute respiratory infections caused by this.
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Can you believe that?
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I find this shocking and somewhat appalling.
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Can't we make cleaner burning cooking fuels?
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Can't we make better stoves?
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How is it that this can lead to over two million deaths every year?
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I know Bill Joy was talking to you about the wonders of carbon nanotubes,
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so I'm going to talk to you about the wonders of carbon macro-tubes,
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which is charcoal.
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(Laughter)
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So this is a picture of rural Haiti.
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Haiti is now 98 percent deforested.
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You'll see scenes like this all over the island.
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It leads to all sorts of environmental problems
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and problems that affect people throughout the nation.
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A couple years ago there was severe flooding
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that led to thousands of deaths --
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that's directly attributable to the fact
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that there are no trees on the hills to stabilize the soil.
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So the rains come --
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they go down the rivers and the flooding happens.
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Now one of the reasons why there are so few trees is this:
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people need to cook,
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and they harvest wood and they make charcoal in order to do it.
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It's not that people are ignorant to the environmental damage.
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They know perfectly well, but they have no other choice.
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Fossil fuels are not available,
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and solar energy doesn't cook the way that they like their food prepared.
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And so this is what they do.
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You'll find families like this who go out into the forest to find a tree,
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cut it down and make charcoal out of it.
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So not surprisingly,
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there's a lot of effort that's been done to look at alternative cooking fuels.
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About four years ago, I took a team of students down to Haiti
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and we worked with Peace Corps volunteers there.
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This is one such volunteer
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and this is a device that he had built in the village where he worked.
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And the idea was that you could take waste paper;
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you could compress it
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and make briquettes that could be used for fuel.
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But this device was very slow.
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So our engineering students went to work on it
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and with some very simple changes,
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they were able to triple the throughput of this device.
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So you could imagine they were very excited about it.
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And they took the briquettes back to MIT so that they could test them.
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And one of the things that they found was they didn't burn.
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So it was a little discouraging to the students.
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(Laughter)
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And in fact, if you look closely,
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right here you can see it says, "US Peace Corps."
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As it turns out, there actually wasn't any waste paper in this village.
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And while it was a good use of government paperwork
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for this volunteer to bring it back with him to his village,
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it was 800 kilometers away.
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And so we thought perhaps there might be a better way
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to come up with an alternative cooking fuel.
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What we wanted to do is we wanted to make a fuel
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that used something that was readily available on the local level.
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You see these all over Haiti as well.
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They're small-scale sugar mills.
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And the waste product from them
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after you extract the juice from the sugarcane
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is called "bagasse."
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It has no other use.
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It has no nutritional value, so they don't feed it to the animals.
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It just sits in a pile near the sugar mill until eventually they burn it.
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What we wanted to do was we wanted to find a way
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to harness this waste resource and turn it into a fuel
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that would be something that people could easily cook with,
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something like charcoal.
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So over the next couple of years,
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students and I worked to develop a process.
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So you start with the bagasse, and then you take a very simple kiln
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that you can make out of a waste fifty five-gallon oil drum.
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After some time, after setting it on fire,
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you seal it to restrict the oxygen that goes into the kiln,
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and then you end up with this carbonized material here.
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However, you can't burn this.
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It's too fine and it burns too quickly to be useful for cooking.
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So we had to try to find a way to form it into useful briquettes.
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And conveniently, one of my students was from Ghana,
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and he remembered a dish his mom used to make for him called "kokonte,"
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which is a very sticky porridge made out of the cassava root.
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And so what we did was we looked,
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and we found that cassava is indeed grown in Haiti,
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under the name of "manioc."
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In fact, it's grown all over the world --
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yucca, tapioca, manioc, cassava, it's all the same thing --
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a very starchy root vegetable.
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And you can make a very thick, sticky porridge out of it,
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which you can use to bind together the charcoal briquettes.
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So we did this. We went down to Haiti.
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These are the graduates of the first Ecole de Charbon,
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or Charcoal Institute.
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And these --
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(Laughter)
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That's right. So I'm actually an instructor at MIT as well as CIT.
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And these are the briquettes that we made.
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Now I'm going to take you to a different continent.
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This is India
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and this is the most commonly used cooking fuel in India.
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It's cow dung.
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And more than in Haiti, this produces really smoky fires,
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and this is where you see the health impacts
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of cooking with cow dung and biomass as a fuel.
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Kids and women are especially affected by it,
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because they're the ones who are around the cooking fires.
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So we wanted to see
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if we could introduce this charcoal-making technology there.
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Well, unfortunately, they didn't have sugarcane
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and they didn't have cassava,
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but that didn't stop us.
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What we did was we found what were the locally available sources of biomass.
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And there was wheat straw and there was rice straw in this area.
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And what we could use as a binder was actually small amounts of cow manure,
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which they used ordinarily for their fuel.
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And we did side-by-side tests,
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and here you can see the charcoal briquettes
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and here the cow dung.
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And you can see that it's a lot cleaner burning of a cooking fuel.
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And in fact, it heats the water a lot more quickly.
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And so we were very happy, thus far.
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But one of the things that we found
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was when we did side-by-side comparisons with wood charcoal,
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it didn't burn as long.
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And the briquettes crumbled a little bit
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and we lost energy as they fell apart as they were cooking.
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So we wanted to try to find a way to make a stronger briquette
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so that we could compete with wood charcoal in the markets in Haiti.
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So we went back to MIT,
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we took out the Instron machine
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and we figured out what sort of forces you needed
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in order to compress a briquette to the level
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that you actually are getting improved performance out of it?
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And at the same time that we had students in the lab looking at this,
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we also had community partners in Haiti working to develop the process,
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to improve it and make it more accessible to people in the villages there.
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And after some time,
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we developed a low-cost press that allows you to produce charcoal,
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which actually now burns not only --
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actually, it burns longer, cleaner than wood charcoal.
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So now we're in a situation where we have a product,
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which is actually better than what you can buy in Haiti in the marketplace,
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which is a very wonderful place to be.
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In Haiti alone, about 30 million trees are cut down every year.
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There's a possibility of this being implemented
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and saving a good portion of those.
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In addition, the revenue generated from that charcoal is 260 million dollars.
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That's an awful lot for a country like Haiti --
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with a population of eight million
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and an average income of less than 400 dollars.
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So this is where we're also moving ahead with our charcoal project.
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And one of the things that I think is also interesting,
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is I have a friend up at UC Berkeley who's been doing risk analysis.
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And he's looked at the problem of the health impacts
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of burning wood versus charcoal.
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And he's found that worldwide, you could prevent a million deaths
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switching from wood to charcoal as a cooking fuel.
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That's remarkable,
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but up until now, there weren't ways to do it without cutting down trees.
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But now we have a way
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that's using an agricultural waste material to create a cooking fuel.
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One of the really exciting things, though,
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is something that came out of the trip that I took to Ghana just last month.
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And I think it's the coolest thing,
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and it's even lower tech than what you just saw,
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if you can imagine such a thing.
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Here it is.
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So what is this?
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This is corncobs turned into charcoal.
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And the beauty of this is that you don't need to form briquettes --
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it comes ready made.
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This is my $100 laptop, right here.
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And actually, like Nick, I brought samples.
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(Laughter)
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So we can pass these around.
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They're fully functional, field-tested, ready to roll out.
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(Laughter)
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And I think one of the things
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which is also remarkable about this technology,
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is that the technology transfer is so easy.
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Compared to the sugarcane charcoal,
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where we have to teach people how to form it into briquettes
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and you have the extra step of cooking the binder,
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this comes pre-briquetted.
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And this is about the most exciting thing in my life right now,
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which is perhaps a sad commentary on my life.
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(Laughter)
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But once you see it, like you guys in the front row --
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All right, yeah, OK.
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So anyway --
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(Laughter)
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Here it is.
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And this is, I think, a perfect example
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of what Robert Wright was talking about in those non-zero-sum things.
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So not only do you have health benefits,
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you have environmental benefits.
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But this is one of the incredibly rare situations
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where you also have economic benefits.
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People can make their own cooking fuel from waste products.
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They can generate income from this.
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They can save the money that they were going to spend on charcoal
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and they can produce excess and sell it in the market
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to people who aren't making their own.
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It's really rare that you don't have trade-offs
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between health and economics, or environment and economics.
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So this is a project that I just find extremely exciting
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and I'm really looking forward to see where it takes us.
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So when we talk about, now, the future we will create,
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one of the things that I think is necessary
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is to have a very clear vision of the world that we live in.
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And now, I don't actually mean the world that we live in.
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I mean the world where women spend two to three hours everyday
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grinding grain for their families to eat.
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I mean the world where advanced building materials
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means cement roofing tiles that are made by hand,
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and where, when you work 10 hours a day,
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you're still only earning 60 dollars in a month.
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I mean the world
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where women and children spend 40 billion hours a year fetching water.
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That's as if the entire workforce of the state of California
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worked full time for a year doing nothing but fetching water.
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It's a place where, for example, if this were India,
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in this room, only three of us would have a car.
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If this were Afghanistan,
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only one person in this room would know how the use the Internet.
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If this were Zambia --
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300 of you would be farmers,
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100 of you would have AIDS or HIV.
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And more than half of you would be living on less than a dollar a day.
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These are the issues that we need to come up with solutions for.
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These are the issues that we need to be training our engineers,
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our designers, our business people, our entrepreneurs to be facing.
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These are the solutions that we need to find.
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I have a few areas that I believe are especially important that we address.
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One of them is creating technologies
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to promote micro-finance and micro-enterprise,
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so that people who are living below the poverty line
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can find a way to move out --
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and that they're not doing it
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using the same traditional basket making, poultry rearing, etc.
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But there are new technologies and new products
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that they can make on a small scale.
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The next thing I believe
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is that we need to create technologies for poor farmers
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to add value to their own crops.
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And we need to rethink our development strategies,
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so that we're not promoting educational campaigns
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to get them to stop being farmers,
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but rather to stop being poor farmers.
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And we need to think about how we can do that effectively.
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We need to work with the people in these communities
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and give them the resources and the tools that they need
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to solve their own problems.
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That's the best way to do it.
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We shouldn't be doing it from outside.
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So we need to create this future, and we need to start doing it now.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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Chris Anderson: Thank you, incredible.
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Stay here.
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Tell us -- just while we see if someone has a question --
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just tell us about one of the other things that you've worked on.
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Amy Smith: Some of the other things we're working on
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are ways to do low-cost water quality testing,
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so that communities can maintain their own water systems,
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know when they're working, know when they treat them, etc.
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We're also looking at low-cost water-treatment systems.
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One of the really exciting things is looking at solar water disinfection
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and improving the ability to be able to do that.
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CA: What's the bottleneck preventing this stuff getting from scale?
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Do you need to find entrepreneurs, or venture capitalists,
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or what do you need to take what you've got and get it to scale?
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AS: I think it's large numbers of people moving it forward.
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It's a difficult thing --
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it's a marketplace which is very fragmented
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and a consumer population with no income.
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So you can't use the same models that you use in the United States
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for making things move forward.
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And we're a pretty small staff,
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which is me.
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(Laughter)
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So, you know, I do what I can with the students.
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We have 30 students a year go out into the field
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and try to implement this and move it forward.
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The other thing is you have to do things with a long time frame,
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as, you know, you can't expect to get something done in a year or two years;
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you have to be looking five or 10 years ahead.
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But I think with the vision to do that, we can move forward.
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