![]() |
| Image by variationblogr via Flickr |
More than 100 Rotarians took part in an international water symposium
in Tel Aviv on 16 November, discussing ways that Rotary can help meet
the world's water and sanitation needs.
The symposium, sponsored by District 2490, was held in conjunction
with WATEC Israel 2011, an annual water technology exhibition and
conference that draws thousands of researchers, developers, politicians,
and business executives from around the world.(click below to read more)
RI President Kalyan Banerjee, addressing both symposium attendees
and the larger WATEC audience, emphasized the need for Rotary service
projects to be sustainable.
Sustainability "means that there will not be a problem finding
parts, fixing something that is broken, finding the money for
maintenance, keeping the project going," he said. "It means the
community will take ownership of a solution, so that even though it
might have come from Rotary originally, it no longer belongs to Rotary."
Community input
Banerjee used the example of solar ovens to illustrate why
successful service projects need to begin with community input. Though
solar ovens might look like a perfect solution to the problem of finding
cooking fuel -- their energy source is free, inexhaustible, and
nonpolluting; they are cheap to make; and they preclude the need to
gather wood and cut down trees -- other factors might have to be
considered, he said. Perhaps local foods need to be cooked at hotter
temperatures than a solar oven provides, or the area is very windy and
the ovens could blow away, or the local women traditionally rise before
dawn to cook.
"These are all issues that you simply might not have thought of,"
Banerjee said. "When we are talking about solutions to a problem, we
must recognize that solutions cannot be imposed. They have to be
developed, they have to be appropriate, they have to be a product of
communication and cooperation."
Ron Denham, chair of the Water and Sanitation Rotarian Action Group
and a member of the Rotary Club of Toronto Eglinton, Ontario, Canada,
said it is especially important to choose appropriate technology for
water projects in low-income areas.
"Appropriate technology means that the technology is within the
capability and capacity of the people to use. It has to be very simple,"
he said. "The community also has to be able to afford to operate and
maintain the facility."
The day's events brought together a wealth of expertise in water
technology in a country that is the world's leader in water
conservation.
Conference organizer Avner Fuchs, past governor of District 2490
and a member of the Rotary Club of Gedera, explained that Israel exists
in a "permanent state of water shortage. We cannot waste any water, so
we look at ways not only to use less water, but to reuse water in every
way we can."
Fuchs said Israel recycles 75 percent of its uncontaminated
wastewater, adding that the figure will rise to 95 percent by 2020.
"Reclaimed water goes into things like cotton, trees, flowers --
anything that people don’t end up eating or drinking," he said.


No comments:
Post a Comment