Title: Engineers Without Borders
1Engineers Without Borders - USA Overview
A non-profit volunteer humanitarian organization.
2- 1.2 billion lack clean water
- 2.4 billion lack adequate sanitation
- 2.4 billion are at risk with malaria
- 29,000 children die from hunger daily
- 1.1 billion overfed vs. 1.1 billion underfed
BACKGROUND
- 1.2 billion lack adequate housing
- 1.6 billion have no access to electricity
- 4.2 billion are unable to read
- 1.8 billion live in conflict zones, in
transition, or in situations of permanent
instability
3- There are 2.2 billion children in the world
- More than 50 live in extreme deprivation
associated with poverty, war, or AIDS - 29,000 die of hunger and malady daily
- 640 million have no adequate shelter
- 500 million have no access to sanitation
- 400 million lack safe drinking water
- 270 million have no healthcare
- 140 million have never gone to school
- 90 million are severely food deprived
- 2 million affected by AIDS with 0.5 million dying
of it each year
4IN THE NEXT TWO DECADES, ALMOST 2 BILLION
ADDITIONAL PEOPLE WILL POPULATE THE EARTH. THIS
GROWTH WILL CREATE DEMANDS ON AN UNPRECEDENTED
SCALE FOR
ENERGY PRODUCTION
FOOD SUPPLY
WATER PRESERVATION
WASTE DISPOSAL
ENVIRONMENTAL CLEANUP
SUITABLE LIVING CONDITIONS
HEALTH CARE
INFRASTRUCTURE
MATERIALS HANDLING
LAND STABILIZATION
EARTH MOVING
TRANSPORTATION DEMAND
5- The majority of the worlds designers focus all
their efforts on developing products and services
exclusively for the richest 10 of the worlds
customers. Nothing less than a revolution in
design is needed to reach the other 90. - Dr. Paul Polak, International Development
Enterprises - Science and technology are linked to economic
growth scientific and technical capabilities
determine the ability to provide clean water,
good health care, adequate infrastructure, and
safe food. - Dr. Calestous Juma, Kennedy School of
GovernmentThere is less than one scientist or
engineer for every 10,000 people in Africa
compared to 2 to 5 per 1000 in Europe and USA.
UNESCO - WHY NOT ENGINEERING FOR THE
OTHER 90
6 Engineers Without Borders - USA
www.ewb-usa.org
- Partners with developing communities to improve
quality of life - Implements environmentally and economically
sustainable engineering projects - Develops internationally responsible engineers
and engineering students - Involves 11,000 members, 271 chapters, 350
projects in 45 countries
7Our Goals
- Empower developing communities by developing
locally sustainable solutions - Building the capacity in the community to
continue improving the quality of life. - Promote long-term relationships between chapters
and a community - A single project is not enough. We embrace the
community. - Community solutions require long-term thinking.
- Project implementation over multiple years builds
trust, knowledge transfer and sustainability. - Educate students and professionals.
- Continuity among the student chapter, the
- professional leaders, and the community
- The community, the students and the
- professionals grow with each project
- Develop Internationally responsible engineers
8The Vision
- EWB-USA's outward vision is a world where all
people have access to the knowledge and resources
with which to meet their basic human needs - Promote sustainable development in such areas
as - water supply and sanitation
- food production and processing
- housing and construction
- energy, transportation and communication
- income generation
- employment creation
9Cost Effective Implementation
Sustainability
Technological Verification
Consumer Demand
10Appropriate and Sustainable Technology is highly
cost effective.
Product Input US Output/Yr US
Treadle pumps, Bangladesh 1 million installed 7 million 100 million
Rope pumps, Nicaragua 50,000 installed 1 million 10 million
Fuel-Efficient Pumps, IndiaAround 3,000 in use 0.1 million 1.25 million in sales
Latrines, Bangladesh 10 million 8 million savings in health
From Smart Water Solutions , NWP (2006)
11Developing a New Generation of Engineers for the
21st Century
- Facilitators of
- Sustainable Development
- Appropriate Technology
- Social and Economic Change
- Capacity Building
- Engineers as social entrepreneurs, community
builders, peace makers - Service above self
- Making a difference in the world
- Designing for the other 90 (P. Polak).
12Engineering Skills
- Problems are varied
- Designs range from Simple to complex
- Implementation is always challenging
13EWBs Projects
- Water Supply 50
- Energy Projects 16
- Sanitation Projects- 11
- Structures Projects 10
- Agricultural Projects 9
- Bridge/road Projects 4
Low Tech, High Impact projects that save lives
while developing the next generation of globally
aware engineers
14Water Projects
- The primary need of many developing communities
is safe water
15UN Millennium Goal
- By 2015, reduce by half the number of people that
do not have access to safe drinking water and
sanitation
16Access to Potable Water
- Water usage comparison
- The average American individual uses
approximately 400 gallons of water at home
including watering yard - UN standard is about 5 gallons per person each
day - More than 200 million hours spent each day by
women and children to collect water from distant,
often polluted sources - Water systems fail at a rate of 50 or higher
17Need for Potable Water
- Contaminated water is the cause of 80 of the
worlds diseases (WHO) - 3.4 million people die from preventable
waterborne illnesses each year - 4,000 children die every day from waterborne
illnesses
18MALI
- Diesel deep well pump stopped working in 1986.
- Villagers resorted to hand dug well
- Simple, safe pump system installed
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20- Low flow
- High fecal coliform levels
- Turbid
- Originate largely from runoff, some go dry
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22Diagnosis and Mitigation Environmental Health
Problems
Mercury
Cyanide
23Health Survey Results
Respondents Top 5 Most Significant Diseases
Diarrhea 69.6
Malaria 56.5
Stomach Illness 39.1
Typhoid 30.4
Dysentery 26.1
Fever 26.1
Cholera 13.0
- 23 surveys completed
- Lack of clean water and hygiene cited most often
as cause of illness
24Water Testing
- Testing
- HACH test strips
- Turbidity tube
- 3M Petrifilm for total coliform and e-coli w/
homemade incubator (heating pad in suitcase) - Watersafe kits (P/A coliform, lead, hardness,
pesticides, etc) - Bacteria, coliform, and pesticides evident
- Current ozone filter has not been changed, is not
being utilized due to cost and lack of knowledge
about system
25Backwash tank
- Bring Your Own Water Treatment SystemGravity
fed settling tank / rapid sand filter / PV
powered UV bulb - Inputted off-scale-high turbidity and bacteria
count and reduced it to nearly 0 CFU. - Maintenance cost is around 50 per year.
Tube settling tank (input)
Power from 102 Watt solar panel
UV Light bulb (output)
Rapid sand filter
Muramba, Rwanda
26Before
Cameroon
27After
- Contaminant free!
- Only 1/3 of the yield needed
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29Installed Irrigation System
30Drip Irrigation
31PARTICIPATION COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT
32- Yanayo, Bolivia
- Replaced current open-fire stove with Lorena-type
stove - Taught local community members how to build stoves
33Yanayo, Bolivia
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35USE OF PHOTOVOLTAIC PANELS
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37MERCHANDIZE PRODUCTS ON LINE
38Organization 501c3 Non Profit Based in
Longmont, CO Membership over 10,000 individuals
70 Student Membership (150 chapters) 30
Professional Membership (70 chapters) Annual
Growth over 50
- Projects
- Projects in 2007 - 250 in 50 countries
- (two years ago - 70 Projects)
- Demand exceeds delivery capacity
- Sponsors
- Philanthropic Groups, inc Rotary
- Energy and Engineering organizations
- US EPA, United Nations, USAID
- CH2MHill, Chevron Texaco, others
39EWB-USA Projects
- We work with more than 100 communities
world-wide. - The average project has approximately 12-15
volunteers. Travel teams usually range from 4-8
volunteers. - The average cost of a project ranges from
15,000-35,000. - Students gain valuable field experience not
necessarily found on a university campus. - Affect the lives of over 1 Million people
worldwide - These projects are initiated by, and completed
with, contributions from the host community,
which is trained to operate the systems without
external assistance. In this way, EWB-USA ensures
that its projects are appropriate and
self-sustaining.
40Participation in a Project
- All EWB-USA projects are conducted through
chapters. - Any adult can participate in an EWB-USA project.
This includes engineers, teachers, business
people, health professionals etc. - We require that all projects have someone with
the technical capabilities overseeing the
technical design of the project. - Health professionals, education professionals,
business professionals, and people proficient in
languages and cultures all have something
valuable to add to these projects.
41Bolivia Projects
- We are working with a local group that supports
EWB to coordinate projects locally. Engineers In
Action (EIA) is located in La Paz and has
previous experience coordinating projects for EWB
Chapters - http//www.engineersinaction.org
Projects Under Application w/ EWB-USA
Zuncallo Intake and Aqueduct System for
irrigation Comucala Intake and Aqueduct System
for irrigation
Projects Under Investigation
Molli Pongo Intake and Aqueduct System for
irrigation San Lorenzo Enlarge a community
hospital Patapani - Potable water system for
drinking
42Our Project!!!
43Zuncallo,Bolivia
- Located in the Altiplano (high plain) of Bolivia.
- 100 families struggle to survive in the dry,
cold land where the steep terrain make producing
crops difficult. - Goal
- Design an irrigation system and help educate the
community to make crop production more
successful. - Potentially create excess marketable crops to
generate income in the community.
44Project Team
- Air Force Academy Cadet Chapter
- Colorado Springs Professional Chapter
45Ways to get involved
- Join a Professional or Student Chapter
- Help start the Colorado Springs Professional
Chapter - UCCS and the Air Force Academy now have ACTIVE
Student Chapters - Boulder, Denver Fort Collins also have
Professional Chapters - Become a mentor for a student project
- Technical Advisory Committee (TAC)
- Reviews and approves all EWB projects and designs
- Provides QA/QC for all EWB-USA projects prior
to implementation - There are currently four regional TACs
- EWB-USA plans to create two additional regional
TACs by summer of 2007, each with 15-25
practicing engineers and health professionals. - Water/Sanitation, Energy, Health, Construction
- Liaison
- Helps to track the projects in a specific country
- Monthly phone call to chapters in that country to
help disseminate information within that country
46Thank you!
47Questions ?
- Colorado Springs Professional Chapter
- Website www.ewbcos.org
- E-mails
- Nicole Nicole.Mosby_at_ch2m.com
- Lisa LBarbato_at_CSU.org