About this Blog

This is the blog for Lincoln's EWB-UK placement in Ujire in Karnatica in Southern India. I am working for SELCO, a solar lighting social enterprise, on the development of a solar food dehydrator, a device used to increase the life of foods. The aim of the placement is to make it fully functional, more efficient and to conduct market research in order to help market the product to customers living in rural areas enabling them to break the poverty cycle.

Sunday, 19 September 2010

Thank You

Thank you very much for reading my blog. I hope you have enjoyed reading it.

I would like to thank everyone who has been a part of making my placement such an enjoyable and interesting experience: the whole placements team at EWB, Anand Narayan - lab manager at SELCO, Sam Cocks, Joyce and Jitendra - my fellow SELCO interns, my family, and of course everyone I've met at the SDM college hostel in Ujire.

Last days in India :(

Today is my last day in India. The last moments of my time spent in Ujire were spent with a group of about 25 representatives from a company called SAP, which provides software management solutions. They had come to visit the SELCO lab to learn about solar energy provision, how the social enterprise business model works, and sustainable business.

Myself and Sam each gave a presentation on our projects and how we had ended up in Ujire. Also on the agenda was a short trip to Dharmastala, Anand's Farm and a SELCO Solar installation, which had been installed because although the houses were right next to electricity pylons, they were too high voltage to take electricity from. The owners themselves would have had to pay for the erection of the electricity poles. I was lucky enough to leave Ujire by filling a spare seat they had on their luxury AC bus which took them back to Bangalore last night. I will be waking up at 2.30 tomorrow morning to travel to the airport and catch my flight back to London & can't wait to start University again.

I thought I'd finish this blog and my last post with several top lists:

Top 5 best experiences:

  • Home-stay visit in rural farmhouse

  • Having a guide to take us around Mysore (including the Centre for renewable energy and sustainable technologies)

  • Masala Dosa, Ice Cream & Gobi Manchurian

  • Meeting and sharing experiences with everyone in the engineering college hostel

  • Transporting testing the solar biomass hybrid dryer.

  • Houseboat tour of the Keralan Backwaters


Top 5 worst experiences:

  • 6 hour bumpy overnight bus journey from Dharmastala to Mysore (10.30 – 04.30)

  • The day of a strike in Trivandrum

  • Walking half an hour back in the rain having forgot my Umbrella.

  • Loosing my appetite for Indian Food when not feeling well

  • Chundering everywhere


My top initial annoyances for westerners traveling to India:

  • Understanding the Indian head wobble

  • A huge number of junk calls and text messages on Indian mobile phones

  • The possibility chance that every rickshaw driver might overcharge you.

  • Lack of pavements on most roads, combined with the crazy traffic behaviour.


Top questions asked to me:

  • How do you find this place?

  • How do you find the food?

  • What are you doing here?


My list of top 5 things India is good at:

  • Sustainable food production and agriculture

  • Hospitality

  • Cheap newspapers

  • A workforce who are skilled enough to carry out repairs

  • Religious Culture

  • Maintaining a high population

  • Governmental corruption


NB. I've definitely missed / forgotten many things from these lists.


Thursday, 16 September 2010

Two solar dryers have been sent to separate groups in the community. One to a self help group, which empowers women by providing employment opportunities. The dryer will provide them with further opportunities and if used effectively will allow them to make an income by selling dried produce.

Another dryer was sent to a farmhouse where a group 50 rice farmers gathered to share ideas and discuss a system of rice intensification. At this meeting, several of SELCO's products in development were demonstrated. Transporting the dryers over 40km required the hiring of an Omni van. A rice thresher, which was designed by a previous SELCO intern was straped precariously to the roof. The vehicle certainly wouldn't have passed its MOT in the UK and had several very bald looking tyres. Nevertheless, we mad it to our destination, dryer and thresher intact.

A batch of dried bananas was prepared in the dryer a day before the meeting to demonstrate the drying process and the quality of the dried produce. I stayed overnight on Tuesday in the nearby town of Karkala, to save the 2 hour short bus journey from Ujire to the farmhouse. I experienced a small amount of luxury by staying in a lodge which had hot water and BBC World Service on the TV. :)
Their was a lot of interest in all the products. They said they were interested in drying coconuts, and the flurry of hands rushing to try the dried bananas certainly showed that they liked the bananas, even if a couple of people commented that they were smoky.

Last weekend saw the Ganesh Chaturthi festival, and in every town we passed through, huge processions and groups of people filled the roads. (blocking them) In Ujire, there were fireworks and a party atmosphere. It was certainly a strange sight to see hundreds of people 'dancing' to Indian music in the street.


Wednesday, 8 September 2010

Training It

I haven't blogged in over a week, so this post is longer than I usually bother to write - I've got the time as I'm writing this on a thirteen hour train journey.

Last week, after ironing out any glitches with the current dryer design, I ordered the construction of two solar biomass hybrid dryers. This was much easier than it had been previously as I did not have to explain the designs. On worker commented 'making one prototype is difficult, but making more is much easier. The purpose of these two dryer is to package them and send them to demonstrate drying at SELCO's regional branches.

The last four days I have taken off work to visit the backwaters of Kerala, and was an experience to remember. Out of the eight different train classes, I decided to travel in what I thought was complete comfort on the way, 2 tier AC. I was given a blanket and a pillow, and spent most of the journey trying to stop the freezing cold AC vent blowing in my face.

It occurred to me as I was being driven round the backwaters on a houseboat, how vulnerable the people living there actually were.

  • What is development? When should it stop?

  • Is an equal world desirable?

  • Is the world overpopulated?

These questions arose in my mind because you see so many people living what appear to be very happy lives among the backwaters. For me the answers to these questions come down to vulnerability and sustainability.

I am now heading back to work. My train (non AC this time has just entered Karnataka - I know this because after 4 days in sunny Kerala, it has just started to rain.

Development problems, like the drying problems I have been faced with are difficult problems to solve. As my placement nears its end, I realise what huge achievements and progress I have made, but have to face the reality that unless SELCO sells any of the products developed in the lab, the impact will be minimal.

I hope the product demonstrations are a success, but know that whatever the outcome the lessons learned will make it have an impact on peoples lives in the future.

Written on the 6604 Mavali Express from Trivandrum to Mangalore.


As a side note, last week, having watched the sun set over the tropical treetops, I was lying on my bed in a etherical haze, and I knew where I was... in India.

But then I just chundered everywhere!!!

(Actually I must have eaten something my body didn't agree with)