Solar-powered, DIY lamp made from a plastic bottle is transforming
lives
by Lee Williams
The charity has pledged
to create a million green, off-the-power-grid lights in 2015 using an
ingenious design
Despite what Back to the Future fans would have you believe, “where's
my hoverboard?” isn't a shoe-in for the motto of 2015. “Let there be
light” is a strong contender, thanks to this being UNESCO's
International Year of Light. The opening ceremony in Paris celebrated
seminal moments in the history of illumination.
It is, I learn, 1,000 years since the great Arabic scientist, Ibn al-Haytham,
released his magnum opus on optics, 150 years since James Clerk Maxwell
came up with the electromagnetic theory of light, and 50 years since the
development of fibre optics. All of which enlightening anniversaries
provide a handy springboard for UNESCO to promote light-based
technologies throughout the year.
For those of us who spend our lives surrounded by artificial light,
bathed in floods of the stuff in our homes and workplaces and on our
streets, it might seem something so mundane as not to require, well, the
spotlight. But today, more than a quarter of the world's population
lives in darkness.
According to UNESCO figures, more than 1.5 billion people around the
world currently have no access to electric light, and around 1.3 billion
of them must spend up to half their income on paraffin to light their
homes at night. Paraffin kills around 1.5 million people a year in
fires, or from associated health problems such as bronchitis and cancer.
Inhaling paraffin smoke on a regular basis is equivalent to smoking four
packets of cigarettes a day.
The need for clean, affordable alternatives is obvious, which is why
one charity, Liter of Light, has pledged to create a million green,
off-the-power-grid lights in 2015 using an ingenious design that is,
frankly, rubbish. Liter of Light has developed a solar-powered light
that is cheap and relatively easy to assemble and whose main feature is
a plastic bottle: the kind that holds a litre of fizzy drink, and that
is usually thrown away once empty.
The original Liter of Light organisation was formed in 2011 in the
Philippines by MyShelter Foundation, a charity offering sustainable
building solutions for storm-damaged communities. MyShelter's founder is
Illac Diaz, who was shocked by the living conditions he saw in rural
areas of the Philippines hit by severe storms during his work as a
telecommunications manager. He began to think about ways of providing
cheap and durable replacement buildings in these storm-damaged areas.
He left his job to study alternative architecture and urban planning
at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. It was there that he first
came cross the original bottle-light technology, which had originally
been developed by a Brazilian mechanic, Alfredo Moser, in 2002. Diaz hit
upon the idea of using the technology to light poor and storm-damaged
homes after seeing videos of it being put to similar use in Haiti. He
returned to his home country and set up MyShelter Foundation in 2006. In
2011, the foundation created Liter of Light, installing solar bottles in
more than 15,000 homes in and around the capital, Manila.
The technology is disarmingly simple – a plastic bottle filled with
bleached water installed in the roof of a building so that daylight from
outside refracts through the water into the room, providing equivalent
brightness to a 50-watt conventional bulb in full daylight. A YouTube
video (goo.gl/wwTn0v) showing how simple it is to install the bottle
lights soon went viral and within a year the organisation had gone
global.
Now, four years later, the charity boasts chapters in 53 countries
and has installed at least 350,000 daytime lights and around 15,000
night lights, a new technology that uses solar panels to provide light
for the night-time as well.
These night-time bottle lights are made up of a simple circuit, a
battery, four LED lights, some plastic tubing, a small solar panel and
the bottle itself. The LEDs are housed inside the protective bottle,
with the solar panel screwed into the top. The three-watt lights provide
enough brightness to light a 15sq m room. The circuits are cleverly
designed so that they automatically switch on and off in the presence or
absence of daylight.
With the addition of a 10ft PVC pipe, or pole made from bamboo or
wood, the device can be transformed into a streetlight. More
importantly, all the components are open-sourced and can be built from
scratch, even down to the circuit itself, the instructions for which can
be found online (goo.gl/QEsfFv).
The fact that the technology is not owned by a large, multinational
corporation is hugely important in the charity's bottom-up approach,
according to Diaz. “If you teach enough people how to make solar lights
they can keep their communities safe with solar streetlights,” he says.
“Three to five watts is all that's needed to light an entire village.
One watt times a million people who do it could be more powerful than a
large-scale power plant.”
Liter of Light provides a model where individual entrepreneurs can
learn to make and install the devices and sell them on to their
communities at a small profit, thus kick-starting grassroots green
economies such as the one in San Pedro Laguna in the Philippines, where
a single local entrepreneur has installed 11,000 solar bottles.
The global success of the idea has led to many different projects
around the world. In Pakistan, the streetlight version of the technology
is being used to light refugee camps. In 2014, local Liter of Light
head, Vaqas Butt, installed 100 streetlights in the UN's Jalozai camp,
one of the largest refugee camps in Pakistan, sheltering 10,000 families
that have fled the conflict in Afghanistan.
“These camps were chock-a-block,” says Butt, “and the average refugee
had no access to light.” For the Year of Light, Butt intends to provide
another 450 lights to the camp and has a further 400 lined up for a
fishing village on Pakistan's Arabian Sea coast. The plan is, says Butt:
“To make sure every nook and corner of that village is lit up - the
houses, the washrooms, the community places, the worship places, the
shops, everything really.” He will also teach the locals how to
replicate the technology, providing a model for the rest of Pakistan's
rural villages, around 50,000 of which are still off the main power
grid.
In Egypt, Liter of Light, backed by the Pepsi company, will provide
streetlights for rural villages as well as lighting 35 schools. But it
is in Colombia where perhaps the most ambitious projects are taking
place. Liter of Light Columbia has developed its own version of the
technology to provide lighting that is 300 per cent more powerful than
conventional yellow streetlights at just 2 per cent of the cost. “The
lifespan is 70,000 hours guaranteed,” says the director of Liter of
Light Colombia, Camilo Hererra, “that's six years of light.”
The streetlights can also shine for three consecutive nights without
recharging. They have already been used to light two roads in the poor
El Codito area of north Bogota and to provide light for 600 families in
Medellin, Colombia's second largest city. The Year of Light will see
2,000 more installed in some of Colombia's off the power grid,
conflict-torn areas and Farc zones. “The first step in making these
communities safer,” says Hererra, “is to illuminate their paths, streets
and public spaces, and this has an impact on security of girls and women
living in these areas.”
Home lighting may not feel like a shining beacon of hope for those of
us sitting under a 100-watt bulb. But for many, it is as distant a dream
as Marty McFly's hoverboard. Hopefully, though, thanks to Liter of
Light, 2015 really will be the year of light for a million more people.
- The Independent |