May 22, 2013 19:04 UTC

Audio / Agriculture Report

Making Power From Coconut Shells, Mango Pits

Mangoes hanging on a tree in Pakistan
Mangoes hanging on a tree in Pakistan
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This is the VOA Special English Agriculture Report.

Seth DeBolt is a plant scientist at the University of Kentucky in the United States. He and other scientists wanted to find a source of fuel that poor people in rural areas of developing countries could use to make electricity.

The United Nations Development Program says a billion and a half people have no electricity. A billion others have an undependable supply.

Professor DeBolt went on a study trip to rural Indonesia. He saw that, everywhere he went, there was very little waste in the use of agricultural products. Everything that farmers grew was used for something. Even the remains of fruit that people did not eat were fed to chickens.

Little waste meant there was little that could be used for fuel. Growing a separate fuel crop would take land away from food crops. That was something Professor DeBolt did not want to do.

SETH DeBOLT: "The people at most risk with respect to energy poverty, typically they're the same people who have food insecurity issues as it is. And then any change in availability would be most detrimental to that group of people."

But he found two items that were in plentiful supply and would not create competition between food and fuel. Coconut shells and mango pits are generally thrown out. Yet Professor DeBolt says they have a lot of energy stored in them. He says they have an "excellent" heating value which he compares to coal of low to moderate grade.

The same is true for the pit of an olive, peach or cherry, or the shell of an almond or walnut. All someone needs is a way to release that energy.

Seth DeBolt says a company in India, Husk Power Systems, is using small generators in villages to make electricity from rice hulls. The process used is called gasification. Heating plant matter in a low-oxygen chamber releases gases. These can be burned in an engine that turns a power-generating turbine.

Professor DeBolt says he and his team see possibilities for coconut and mango power.

SETH DeBOLT: "Hey, well these crops are growing here and these are the areas where there is potential for energy poverty to be alleviated at least in part by these small-scale production systems."

The researchers have just published a study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. They say these systems could provide as much as thirteen percent of the energy needs of a country like Indonesia. Other tropical countries with large crops of coconuts, mangoes and similar fruit could benefit, as well.

But Professor DeBolt says this is not a perfect solution. There are technical questions, like how to safely deal with the hazardous waste that gasification can produce. And there needs to be money to get these projects started.

And that's the VOA Special English Agriculture Report. I'm Jim Tedder.

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Contributing: Steve Baragona

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by: Ms.Dieu Quynh-TTLady
03/21/2012 2:29 AM
These studies need more and more budget to run !


by: niazi
03/17/2012 3:55 AM
wow that is neutrally energy for all of poor people in the world in my poor country i remember one NGO made a deeply like water pit then release animal and human fertilize then keeping that by slap and share with plumbing but out of gasification.


by: jamine
03/15/2012 3:48 AM
To build the factory we need money and land. Eviornmemt surrounded by tropycal area is getting worse like disforestration.I hope that we can find a way giving a help earth not us .


by: Flavia
03/15/2012 3:29 AM
Oliver, Brazilian governants have enough money to build generators. But they prefer to spend the public money building hydroelectrics. They are horrible because they destroy our rainforests and change the nature of our rivers.


by: Jow SingSing
03/15/2012 12:45 AM
There is a lot of kind of fuel and energy but all of them once we use and continue to use without replenishment, they will be run out one day. I think the problem is that we use world energy so much, we don't think of save energy or stop using it. People in the world competition of using it, this article shown another option of using energy and it quite useful of reserving the shortage ones.


by: KANOKWAN
03/14/2012 11:01 PM
In Thailand we have alot of fruit such as mango , durian , coconut that can change to energy .
But price of product still cheap .


by: Roman
03/14/2012 9:38 AM
This is a great article. Due to the constant rise in price of fossil fuels we have to look for new sources of energy. We need more people like Seth DeBolt.


by: Ben
03/14/2012 3:23 AM
2.5 billion without reliable source of energy? It's hard to believe when you live in the area where such problems are solved a or with minimal overall impact for community.


by: fang
03/13/2012 9:15 PM
I had the same idea about how to make use of the gabbage of the agriculture ,it is a different change for use the agriculture to produce energy if it succed, I hope that come ture .


by: Jean
03/13/2012 7:41 PM
What an amazing idea to turn waste into electricity. This technology will help lots of people especially in rural areas or developing countries. It also beneficial for our environment. The disaster which happened on March 11, 2011 in Japan just has its anniversary. I hope there will be more and more scientists devoted to such research. And the nuclear power will be replaced soon. Thanks VOA.

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