Indian NGO Barefoot College is gaining greater recognition for its rural development efforts. Based in North India, the organization trains low-income rural women from around the world to help implement community-based solutions to energy, water, education, healthcare, and basic livelihoods. One of its most prominent initiatives is to train women on how to install and maintain solar devices within homes. Barefoot College has trained 150 women from almost 30 countries to do, enabling them to collectively electrify nearly 10,000 homes with solar power.
(CNN) -- Turning grandmothers into solar engineers is one of Sanjit "Bunker" Roy's favorite jobs.
Roy
is the social entrepreneur and founder of the Barefoot College and has
been championing a bottom-up approach to education and empowering rural
poor since 1972.
It is now a global enterprise with roots in
India. Roy recruits women from around the world to install and maintain
solar lighting and power in their home villages.
"If you ask any
solar engineer in the world, 'Can anyone make this in a village?' they
say it's technically impossible. And if I say a grandmother is making it
who is illiterate, he can't believe it, it's beyond his comprehension,"
says Roy.
The United Nations estimates that around 1.5 billion people still
live without electricity, and often the best and most immediate way to
bring non-polluting electricity to remote regions is with solar energy.
Roy certainly believes so.
"The way to go about this is not a centralized grid system, which brings in power from hundreds of miles away," he says.
"It
is to bring in basic light right down to the level of basic household
wherein they take ownership and control over that technology."
Women are the focus for the solar power projects that the Barefoot College runs because men "were very untrainable," says Roy.
"(Men)
were restless, compulsively mobile, and they all want a certificate and
the moment you give them a certificate they leave the village and go to
the cities looking for jobs.
"So why not invest in women, older women, mature women, gutsy women who have roots in the village and train them."
Coming
from countries across the world, the women are trained for six months
before returning home. Many of the women have previously never left
their villages before.
"We were scared. We don't even know (our
neighbor) Rwanda...how can we go to India?" says Moyoonia Olive from
Democratic Republic of Congo.
"But, since everyone was interested in having electric current soon, we even convinced our husbands!"
To
overcome any language barrier, classes are taught primarily with sign
language and color-coded circuits. The women learn to build and maintain
a variety of solar-powered lamps and chargers.
The Barefoot
College "campus" in Tilonia, Rajasthan, is a testament to the power of
solar --everything there is powered by the sun; food is prepared using a
parabolic solar cooker, night classes are powered by solar lanterns.
Roy
says that the school has trained 150 grandmothers from 28 countries,
electrified around 10,000 houses with solar power and saved several
thousands of liters of diesel and kerosene from polluting the
atmosphere.
"We have shown that solar-electrified villages can be technically and financially self-sufficient," says Roy.
"The Barefoot College is supposed to be a sparking off process. People are adopting it and owning it, which is really the story behind the college."
http://edition.cnn.com/2011/TECH/innovation/01/24/barefoot.college.india/
http://www.barefootcollege.org/default.asp