VOA朗读: Bringing Light to Homes in Poor Countries



Bringing Light to Homes in Poor Countries

20 December 2009


This is the VOA Special English Development Report.
More than one and a half billion people around the world live without electricity. Finding better ways to bring light to the poor is the goal of researchers like David Irvine-Halliday.

In the late nineteen nineties, the Canadian professor was working in Nepal when his return flight was canceled. A delay gave him time to take a fourteen-day hiking trip in the Himalayas.

As he tells it, one day he looked in the window of a school and noticed how dark it was. This is a common problem for millions of children around the world -- and not just at school, but also at home.

Many families use kerosene oil lamps. There are many problems with these lamps. They produce only a small amount of light. They are dangerous to breathe. And they are a big fire danger, causing many injuries and deaths each year.

Kerosene costs less than other forms of lighting, but it is still costly in poor countries. Professor Irvine-Halliday says many people spend well over one hundred dollars a year on the fuel.

When he returned to Canada, he began researching ways to provide safe, clean and affordable lighting. He began experimenting with light-emitting diodes, LEDs, at his laboratory at the University of Calgary in Alberta. As a professor of renewable energy, he already knew about the technology.

Light-emitting diodes are small glass lamps that use much less electricity than traditional bulbs and last much longer.

Professor Irvine-Halliday used a one-watt bright white L.E.D. made in Japan. He found it on the Internet and connected it to a bicycle-powered generator. He remembers thinking it was so bright, a child could read by the light of a single diode.

In two thousand, after much research and many experiments, he returned to Nepal to put the systems into homes. His Light Up the World Foundation has now equipped the homes of twenty-five thousand people in fifty-one countries.

DAVID IRVINE-HALLIDAY: "The one-time cost of our system -- which consists of a small solar panel, a little motorcycle-sized battery and a couple of LED lamps, which basically live forever, as well as the solar panel -- is less than one hundred dollars. So, one year of kerosene would pay for a solid-state lighting system."

Now his aim is to develop a lower-cost lighting system. In January, David Irvine-Halliday is leaving the University of Calgary. He has also decided to give up leadership in the Light Up the World Foundation to start a company in India.


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I DO admire you a LOT now! Give me some of your persistence! -小千...千与千寻- 给 小千...千与千寻 发送悄悄话 小千...千与千寻 的博客首页 (161 bytes) () 12/21/2009 postreply 20:14:37

Same here! -YuGong- 给 YuGong 发送悄悄话 YuGong 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 12/21/2009 postreply 20:21:03

Thanks YuGong~ -天泽园- 给 天泽园 发送悄悄话 天泽园 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 12/22/2009 postreply 16:22:30

千寻,Thanks for the compliments~ -天泽园- 给 天泽园 发送悄悄话 天泽园 的博客首页 (162 bytes) () 12/22/2009 postreply 16:22:04

Good & sweet reading~~ -lilac09- 给 lilac09 发送悄悄话 lilac09 的博客首页 (84 bytes) () 12/22/2009 postreply 07:51:48

回复:Good & sweet reading~~ -天泽园- 给 天泽园 发送悄悄话 天泽园 的博客首页 (136 bytes) () 12/22/2009 postreply 16:24:59

回复:VOA朗读: Bringing Light to Homes in Poor Countries -eyeyey- 给 eyeyey 发送悄悄话 eyeyey 的博客首页 (224 bytes) () 12/22/2009 postreply 07:55:05

回复:回复:VOA朗读: Bringing Light to Homes in Poor Countries -天泽园- 给 天泽园 发送悄悄话 天泽园 的博客首页 (267 bytes) () 12/22/2009 postreply 16:28:06

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