The Liter of Light project, launched
to combat the rising cost of electricity in the Philippines, aims to
provide 1 million homes with light.
Plastic bottles are put in shanty home roofs to provide light. Photograph: Sunshine Deleon
Around 25,000 low-income homes in the Philippines have been lit up after the launch of a scheme to fit sunlight-powered "bulbs" made from old plastic bottles.
In a country where 40% of the
population lives off less than $2 a day, the rising cost of power leaves
many unable to afford electricity. Some use candles as a light source,
but when generations of family members share a small, dark space in
shanty towns, accidental and destructive fires are often the result.
The Liter of Light project
was launched six months ago by the My Shelter Foundation, a
Philippines-based NGO which aims to provide light to 1 million of the
roughly 12 million homes who are either still without light or live on
the threshold of having their electricity shut down.
The scheme uses plastic bottles
filled with a solution of bleached water, installed into holes made in
shanty towns' corrugated iron roofs, which then refracts the equivalent
of 55W of sunlight into the room – during the day, at least. It takes
five minutes to make, and using a hammer, rivet, metal sheets, sandpaper
and epoxy, it costs $1 to produce.
Eduardo Carillo, a resident in one of
Metro Manila's many impoverished areas, said: "Before we had the bottle
light, the walkways to our house were so dark and going inside made it
even darker. The children are no longer scared – they are happy now and
they laugh because they can play inside during the day instead of
playing in the streets."
The idea of using plastic
bottles as a light source is not a new one - it was developed in Brazil
by Alfredo Moser in 2002. But with the help of a group of MIT students,
the solar bulb used in the Philippines has been modified to meet local
needs.
My Shelter Foundation Founder and social entrepreneur Ilac Diaz explains: "We basically did a cheap kind of one-way lock using the metal sheet. Once you put in the bottle, it will not slip down anymore. That way even if the roof expanded or contracted with the heat, it would not affect the waterproofing and would keep the bottle intact for many years to com."
Diaz believes in the importance of using "appropriate" green technologies for poorer countries:
"The
challenge is how can the developing world come up with its own model to
limit emissions of carbon- we cant afford to buy imported, patented or
manufactured solutions from the developed world and can't afford to wait
until they become affordable."
The programme is also creating
jobs. What began with teaching and contracting one unemployed man to
make the first 1000 bottles has evolved into an ongoing program that has
creating more than 20 jobs in installing the bottles. "We wanted to
prove one man could change his village," said Diaz..
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