Hand-cranked washing machine could sustainably help 5 billion people
[Feb 10, 2022: Fino Menezes]
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Women often carry a disproportionate burden hand washing clothes a task which can take up to to 20 hours per week. We are trying to alleviate the burden of handwashing clothes for women all over the world by providing a manual off-grid washing solution. Our Divya's will make washing clothes faster and easier, giving precious time back to women. (CREDIT: Facebook/thewashingmachineproject)
Handwashing clothes sounds like a simple task, but for many women around the world it poses a significant obstacle to their wellbeing and livelihood. By providing displaced and low-income communities with an accessible, off-grid washing solution, The Washing Machine Project’s mission is to empower women with the time to take charge over their lives.
“A mother or a child doesn’t have to spend 20 hours a week handwashing clothes,” Nav Sawhney, an engineering student at Bath University, told Oxfam. Nav has created a manual, portable, washing machine.
Divya, a woman Nav met in southern India, first sparked the idea when she explained the struggle of washing clothes without a machine. This time-consuming, physical burden is often shouldered by women and girls in developing countries.
Now, Nav's washing machines - which he named Divya after the woman who inspired them - could free up time for women and young girls to pursue education and paid work.
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Nav's washing machines - which he named Divya after the woman who inspired them - could free up time for women and young girls to pursue education and paid work. (CREDIT: Facebook/thewashingmachineproject)
After research in Iraq, Lebanon, the Philippines and Jordan, as well as India – he came up with a machine that uses only 10 litres of water a cycle, compared with 30 by a typical electric machine, crucial in places where water is short. It’s also made out of off-the-shelf components that are easy to replace.
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Sawhney and his fellow volunteers won a grant from Bath University to help the project, and already received orders from Kenya, Nigeria and Uganda, as well as from the UNHCR for refugees in Jordan.
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Together with the Iraq Response Innovation Lab, Oxfam installed 50 of Nav's machines in an Iraqi refugee camp. The Innovation Lab is a volunteer-led organisation who made all 50 washing machines with 75 volunteers from all over the UK.
(CREDIT: Facebook/thewashingmachineproject)
The inventor of the off-grid washing machine-cum-exercise-bike made from recycled cycle parts even won a National Award for her design. Remya Jose, now in her 20s, from Kerala, India, is a gifted innovator with a number of ingenious inventions to her credit. The washing-cum-exercise bike that she developed when she was just 14 years old received a National Innovation Award from former Indian President Abdul Kalam.
For more science news stories check out our New Innovations section at The Brighter Side of News.
Note: Materials provided above by Fino Menezes. Content may be edited for style and length.
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Tags: #New_Innovations, #Global_Good_News, #Washing_Machine, #Cleaning, #Developing_World, #Technology, #Science, #The_Brighter_Side_of_News
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