Tag archives for development

A simple innovation that can save lives – and lots of trees

The Ezystove in action. Photo: Ergonomidesign | Creative Entrepreneur Solutions.

I have gotten used to new innovations being complicated technological and often quite futuristic… eh, things, that few of us can fully understand. This innovation, however is in many ways the total opposite.

The stove Ezystove, developed by the industrial designers at Swedish Ergonomidesign can be locally produced, comes in a flat package and can be assembled with the help of a simple screwdriver. The price of the stove will also be so cheap that almost anyone should be able to afford it.

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A Swedish woman at the world’s toughest job

Ugandan farmer Angela Mukakabirwa and Swedish bank employee Linda Andersson. Photo: Cecilia Abrahamsson/Kooperation Utan Gränser.

It is sometimes said that you can’t fully understand someone else until you have walked a mile in her shoes. The Swedish development organisation The Swedish Cooperative Centre might have had this in mind when they last year announced that they were looking for a woman for the world’s toughest job. So, what was this impossible job? Constructing oil rigs in the Atlantic ocean? Going to the moon?
No. The world’s toughest job consisted in doing what millions of women around the world do everyday: being an impoverished small-scale farmer, in this case in Uganda. Read more » >>

World Water Week: Mobile phone water testing, scary news and new insights

Stockholm-Water-Junior-Prize

2011 Stockholm Junior Water Prize. Winner Alison Bick together with Sweden's Crown Princess Victoria. Photo: Cecilia Österberg/Exray

The World Water Week has filled Stockholm with water-related events all week. On Tuesday, this year’s Junior Water Prize was announced, going to American 17 year old Alison Bick, who has spent four years developing a low-cost portable method to test water quality. The reason why Alison Bick has spent four years working on this project, writes the Swedish environment magazine Miljöaktuellt (in Swedish), is that her home region was flooded and the media that the water wasn’t safe to drink. This made Alison start thinking about if there could be a way to measure water quality with things you have at home. Her idea combines micro-fluidic devices, cell-phones, and chemical indicators and does not only accurately assess the bacteria content of water. It is both significantly faster and up to 200 times less expensive than standard testing procedures.

But all water news haven’t been as positive during this World Water Week. One problematic area concerning Sweden a lot is the Baltic Sea. Daniel Conley, who is a professor at Lund University, has taken a closer look at the levels of oxygen in the coastal areas of all the countries surrounding the Baltic. The result is disheartening: The lack of oxygen is worse than the researchers had thought, reaching much closer to land than before.
The big problem of the Baltic is that a lot of nutrients leak out in the water, making the algae grow in abnormal quantities. When these algae die, they sink to the bottom, consuming all the bottom oxygen when they decompose.
– We have to reduce the emissions [of nutritients] or this problem will just grow worse, says Daniel Conley to Dagens Nyheter.

Another one was this, reported in an interview by Miljöaktuellt (in Swedish): Sweden’s drinking water, that we often boast about, might not be as good as we think. During the last two years we have had two outbreaks of water-transmitted infections and a lot of our water purification plants still don’t have the equipment to deal with this kind of parasites, says Erika Lind who is national drinking water coordinator at the National Food Administration. To keep a good water quality, especially in the light of climate change, Sweden needs to deal with the risks associated with our drinking water, she says.
– If nothing bad happens you don’t do anything about it – and that’s how we have lived until now.

One week full of water discussions of course contains a lot more than this. A nice sample collection of that can be found at WaterCube.tv that have made short interviews with the participants. Watch this one, where Phd and Masters students, Karin Edberg and Melissa Denbaum talk about their insights during the week.

 

More about World Water Week in Swedish media (in Swedish, but can be translated here):
Miljöaktuellt: Here’s the inventor who might be able to solve the world’s water problem

Will big cities have enough water?

Water-in-Cairo

Water in Cairo, Egypt, on of the mega cities being discussed at the World Water Week in Stockholm. Photo: Jakob Granit, SIWI.

In a world where most of us live in cities, and the urban population grows by 2 persons every second, water can be a big problem, whether it’s flooding the streets, disappearing or being polluted. So how secure everyone’s access to clean water? That’s the focus of this year’s World Water Week, which begun yesterday here in Stockholm.

Around 2 500 politicians, business leaders, innovators, and representatives of international organisations from allover the world have gathered to penetrate these issues from all angles. To start off on a truely international note, nine mayors and other high-rank representatives from cities in for example China, India, Rwanda and France will start the week by discussing their different challenges when it comes to giving their citizens good water. The World Water Week will also bring up questions like rising sea levels because of climate change, health issues and how to reduce water usage.

For anyone interested in these issues, there’s a good opportunity to follow several of the seminars in live webcasts at this web page.

 

More about Word Water Week in Swedish media (in Swedish, but can be translated here):
Dagens Nyheter “The water crisis can lead to conflicts across the borders” (Op-Ed article by Jae So, head of Water and Sanitation Program)