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Post by OtishOtish on Mar 28, 2013 4:58:32 GMT 3
Some time ago while on a flight from Nairobi I met a foreigner who has been labouring to build cheap, efficient toilets in Kenya. I was astonished at the figures he produced for how much shite was costing us. But I later checked, and it was hard to argue with the figures. (I have previously posted some of them on Jukwaa but cannot readily recall the title of the thread) Going by the following report we now have new figures. (I have yet to confirm them from other sources, but they seem credible enough.) www.the-star.co.ke/news/article-113565/lack-latrines-costs-kenya-sh27-billion-every-yearBy way of comparison, the Thika "Superhighway" cost approximately only one year's worth of shite. And the last figures I saw for the provision of an adequate number of "permanent" facilities was just below $100 million. I have also previously written about food. Not just the famine stuff, with starving people covered with flies showing up on TV, but even more basic things: the number of Kenyan children whose physical growth and brain-development get stunted due to inadequate nutrition is astonishing. Proper food, decent housing and education, adequate health facilities, basic security .... these are the things I imagine are (or should be) of concern to the majority of Kenyans, many of whom face all sorts of daily struggles. But I suppose they aren't as exciting as "our man into the big chair!" So what were we discussing ...? Ah yes ... Back to it, then. But be sure to do it where it belongs and to wash your hands afterward.
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Post by amadain on Mar 28, 2013 23:52:48 GMT 3
Hilarious title. Perhaps this tidal wave of shite could net somebody a few bob? I can imagine two men standing in front of a mansion sometime in the future. "Wow that's a nice house. What do you do?"
"I work in shite".'Mama Poo' brings simple sanitation to a Kenyan slum“They call me ‘Mama Poo,” Anne told me matter-of-factly as we strolled through a dusty pathway in Silanga, a small neighborhood in the expansive Kibera slums of Nairobi, Kenya. “And I like that,” she added. www.csmonitor.com/World/Making-a-difference/Change-Agent/2011/0914/Mama-Poo-brings-simple-sanitation-to-a-Kenyan-slumSanergy Is Putting A Price On Poop and Cleaning Up in KenyaSanergy sells toilets to local entrepreneurs, who offer the use of the toilet for 5 cents a pop, to a user base of about 77 people. The waste will be converted to biogas in an anaerobic digester, which will power a CHP (combined heat and power) engine, generating electricity that will be sold to the national power grid. www.treehugger.com/bathroom-design/sanergy-putting-price-poop-and-cleaning-kenya.html
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Post by amadain on Apr 25, 2013 20:48:20 GMT 3
Interesting documentary about shite in Kenya.
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