Changes

Drip Irrigation - Pepsi and Nica

424 bytes added, 23:24, 31 December 2019
Field experiences
|}
<br>
[[Image:Nica_drip.PNG|thumb|right|200px|Nica drip system working with 1 m pressure and made of local produced plastic hose. Photo: Netherlands Water Partnership.]]
===Field experiences===
[[Image:solar market garden.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Solar Market Garden project hooks up solar panels to a drip-system. Photo: [http://www.self.org/benin.shtml Solar Electric Light Fund.]]]
* Zimbabwe study: [http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=2&ved=0CF4QFjAB&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwwwoar.icrisat.org%2Fjournal%2Fvolume5%2Faes%2Faes3/2386/1/Can_drip_irrigation_improve1.pdf&ei=or6IT_v6F4SRiQKtttjRCw&usg=AFQjCNGn3_ShgoWdh07v0N9SF3hjGVo94Q&sig2=hTcIVLO36LI3yuvdDXmGlg Can drip irrigation improve the livelihoods of smallholders? Lessons learned from Zimbabwe].<br>{|style="border: 2px solid #e0e0e0; width: 20%; text-align: justify; background-color: #e9f5fd;" cellpadding="2"<!--rsr logo here-->|- style="vertical-align: top"|[[Image:akvorsr logo_lite.png|center|60px|link=http://akvo.org/products/rsr/]]<!--project blocks here-->|- style="vertical-align: bottom"|[[Image:project 819.jpg |thumb|center|140px|<font size="2"><center>[http://rsr.akvo.org/project/819/ RSR Project 819]<br>Water, Food & Sanitation for School + Community</center></font>|link=http://rsr.akvo.org/project/819/]] |}
<br>
====Solar Market Garden Project====
For the first time, women farmers in the rural villages of Bessassi and Dunkassa, in northern Benin, are able to grow vegetables and fruits during the six month dry season, improving food security and nutrition for themselves and their families. Farmers are also increasing their income by selling excess crops in the market. Now entering its third year, [http://wwwweb.selfstanford.orgedu/beningroup/solarbenin/data/SolarMarketGardenInfo/Solar%20Market%20Garden.shtml pdf SELF's Solar Market Garden project] has proved that solar energy can provide long term solutions to hunger, malnutrition and poverty in developing nations.
In addition, since December 2010, the villagers of Bessassi and Dunkassa now have access to clean drinking water via water wells powered by custom arrays of solar-panels ranging from 1.2 - 4 kW. This particular combination is not only a long-term solution, but can also be replicated all over the African continent.
Akvopedia-spade, akvouser, bot, bureaucrat, emailconfirmed, smwadministrator, smwcurator, susana-working-group-susana-member, administrator, widget editor
697
edits