Up Scaling Invasive Plant Biomass Briquette Production: Case of Kendu Bay, Lake Victoria, Kenya

Journal Title: Advances in Social Sciences Research Journal - Year 2017, Vol 4, Issue 4

Abstract

Simple, production processes involving local community labour provide useful cottage fuel products. Such conversion of waste or intrusive bio mass to fuel briquettes is more about know-how than large capital infrastructure and funding. This paper describes up scaling a pilot process that converted water hyacinth to briquettes by hands on training of Kendu Beach Community Unit members, in situ, over a two week period. System and target knowledge, before training, and transformational knowledge, post training, were elicited and the results analyzed. Briquettes produced from five plant bio mass types and their respective blends vide carbonization, were tested in a laboratory. Water hyacinth briquettes produced during up scaling were much better than those produced during the pilot production due to machine compaction refinements. Blending five dried biomass types with each other before carbonization yielded higher calorific values despite the labour intensive and relatively low technology mediated process. User acceptance tests were conducted on site. The uptake of the easy to follow; labour intensive process using simple briquetting machines was a success with the community producing briquettes on their own after an initial three day, post drying production run. Such cottage solutions for domestic consumption and sale should be promoted as a sustainable substitute for fossil or wood based fuel. Confidence building measures between the community and their devolved representatives such as ward administrators and members of Constituent Assemblies under the 2012 Constitutional dispensation should be undertaken. The East African Community project LVEMP-II should, through greater stakeholder engagement, have a greater impact on Lake Victoria’s ecosystem in order to enhance the livelihoods of the beach communities.

Authors and Affiliations

Anthony J Rodrigues, Martin Omondi Odero, Daniel Kerich, Francis Odundo, Walter Akuno

Keywords

Related Articles

Instructional Media Usage And Students’ Academic Performance In Colleges Of Education, Ghana

This study reported on the extent to which Instructional Media (IM) are being utilized at the Colleges of Education in Ghana and how IM utilization affect students’ academic performance. Quasi-experimental design was ado...

The Implementation Of Regional Authority Of West Java Province In The Sea In 2017

The Law Number 23 of 2014 concerning Regional Government, which among others regulates the extension of authority of the Province in the maritime sector, removes the authority of the District / Municipal over the supervi...

Human Formation Of The Educator During A Pedagogy Undergraduate Course - Outcomes Of An Exploratory Research Study

This article is a result of an exploratory research study on the feasibility and comprehensiveness of the undergraduate course in Pedagogy promoting the human formation of the educator. The idea of human formation aims t...

Students’ Perceptions on Individual Reconstruction Phase of Reading to Learn: A Qualitative Study.

Continuous and never-ending research is being done on the areas of the four skills of English, speaking, reading, writing, and listening. Teachers as well as researchers of English everywhere are trying to improve the qu...

Double Tragedy for Women with Disabilities in the Zimbabwean Education System.

Disability is about discrimination and systematic exclusion. This is aggravated in the case of women with disabilities in developing countries. Women with disabilities face attitudinal, physical and financial barriers in...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP327619
  • DOI 10.14738/assrj.44.2698
  • Views 46
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Anthony J Rodrigues, Martin Omondi Odero, Daniel Kerich, Francis Odundo, Walter Akuno (2017). Up Scaling Invasive Plant Biomass Briquette Production: Case of Kendu Bay, Lake Victoria, Kenya. Advances in Social Sciences Research Journal, 4(4), 10-30. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-327619