"Dung Power" in transforming food security for Cambodian Villagers. reported in The Star Online: Lifestyle section. Financed by the Austrialian government and including an integrated approach to sanitation (introducing toilets), biogas with sterilized fertilizer as a side benefit to fertilize fish ponds and vegetable gardens.
The benefits to the introduction of this type of technology are huge. There is currently an epidemic of blindness occuring in Places like India and Nepal where homes are heated by the burning of dried animal dung. This may not be due to the inherent smoke involved in burning dung but more likely due to some chemical that is passing through the animals in their dung that is ending up in the home fires of small ill ventilated huts. Just imagine if pesticides, herbicides, petroleum products, smog, metals and all sorts of other stuff including radioactive dust could be on the grass that cows and yaks eat and pass through their systems into their dung.
Secondly, the introduction of communial toilets instead of family Pit Latrines goes miles in the elimination of sources of contamination to drinking water. Plus the temperatures that the bacteria generate in an anaerobic digester (@140 F) are often sufficent to kill many common pathogens.
****** the Article follows as I do not trust it will stay long ****
Dung power
By KER MUNTHIT
Nget Loun’s rickety old thatched house is typical of Cambodia’s impoverished countryside, but it holds a surprise inside: a state of the art, environment-friendly gas stove.
Off the grid as far as most utilities are concerned, her household and 29 others in the village of Tamoung get a steady supply of clean energy from human and animal waste, using a device that not only makes cooking less of a chore, but also keeps their gardens flourishing and helps save the forests.
At the centre of the experiment is a device called a biological gas digester – or biodigester – which converts a by-product of manure into cooking gas. The technology has taken hold in other countries as a way to generate gas or electricity, and now an independent development group is hoping to spread it to Cambodia’s poor rural people.
Brendan Boucher, the Australian co-ordinator for the non-profit Cambodian Rural Development Team, which is financed by donations from abroad, introduced the project last year in Tamoung, a village in Takeo province 70km south of the capital Phnom Penh.
Cambodian villager Som Chhear showing his biological gas digester near his house in Tamoung village.
Boucher says biogas stoves can help improve food security for villagers and reduce the pressures on Cambodia’s fast-disappearing forests, which are relied on for firewood.
Som Chhear, 57, says he used to trek 10km from home to find firewood to store for use during the rainy season. When his supply ran low, he had to spend 10,000 riel (RM9.30) a month on buying firewood or charcoal from a nearby market.
Now, his biodigester not only provides him with free cooking gas, but also with nutrient-rich effluent – organic fertiliser – that “keeps my vegetable garden green for all seasons.”
Nget Loun, 25, says the biogas stove makes cooking an easier chore. “The cooking pots and my hands are no longer dirtied with black smoke from burning wood,” she says. “And it has absolutely no smell,” she adds while opening the gas valve and firing up the stove with a lighter.
Boucher notes an additional benefit: the introduction of toilets, a hygienic convenience absent from most rural Cambodian homes. Human and animal waste is flushed through the toilet into a plastic “digester” tube 10m long and 1.5m in diameter that sits in a ditch under a thatched roof. At the far end, a knee-deep trench collects liquid residue for use as fertiliser.
A PVC pipe attached to the tube’s midsection channels methane gas emitted by the manure mix into a plastic storage bag in the house, from which it is fed into the stove. Each unit cost about 400,000 riel (RM380) to set up.
Boucher says biogas units are part of an integrated development package of water wells, fish ponds, vegetable gardens and training in farming methods, all meant to bolster food security. About half of Cambodia’s 13 million people live on less than 4,000 riel (RM3.8) a day, so many families are at the mercy of nature for their sustenance. The entire package for Tamoung village cost 540,440,000 riel (RM513,418), which was paid by the Australian government.
Twenty-five biodigesters were installed, serving 30 of the village’s 130 families. Ownership of at least three cows was a prerequisite – making 100 families eligible – and a random drawing selected those who got the systems.
Previous efforts to promote biogas technology in Cambodia more than a decade ago met with limited success. About 500 biogas units were installed but most were abandoned by users within one or two years, says San Thy, a researcher at the Centre for Livestock and Agriculture Development, another non-profit group.
One reason was that peasants failed to keep a suitable number of livestock. “Sometimes, needing money, they just sold their entire stock. Without supplies of manure, the digesters simply don’t work,” San Thy says.
Boucher says that providing villages with integrated systems that include components for sustainable development – such as fish ponds and vegetable gardens – can generate income to pay for maintenance of the biodigesters.
“We don’t profess what we do will alleviate poverty throughout Cambodia, but it certainly goes a huge way in improving food security, increasing incomes and the livelihoods of people,” he says.
Cambodian villager Nget Loun stands in front of her gas stove in her house in Tamoung village, Takeo province, south of Phnom Penh. It has been a boon for Chent Dejorith’s family, which raises pigs. He says his brother-in-law figured out how to use the methane gas to power a small generator, which pumps water from their well to sell to other villagers. His family has been using the new technology to generate power for four months.
“Sometimes, we even use the power from the generator to operate our karaoke machine and sing for fun,” he says. – AP
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