Monday, October 10, 2011

The Press and Briquette Making

Differing waste materials have different energy contents. If you are working with commercial or export markets, they may want to know the energy contents of the briquettes. For those markets, you may want to know the energy content of the materials you are briquetting.
Kikumu agriculture research centre shall briquette waste disposals to ensure that landfills in urban and gab badge disposals are used properly by man
Requires the following considerations:
The difficulty of firewood access and other sources for cooking energy sources
 If firewood is difficult to access, then conduct a briquettes production project. If cheap,
there is no need.
 The local policies related to fuel wood consumption
 Get an overview on policies in favor of or against collection of firewood.
 The limitations to using alternative fuels and restrictions on marketing
 Find space in the market
Can charcoal sellers be integrated?
The proximity to the local market for sale of fuel briquettes
 If demand is there, pool resources together and transport the fuel briquettes
The experience of the group with entrepreneurial self-reliance and sustainable activity
 Group must be innovative, interested, and creative in order to survive
 Make briquettes production a business, not an activity
The availability and applicability of published baseline information on fuel wood/rural energy
consumption for eventual impact assessment of the project/enterprise
 Key data: Population size, household sizes and expenditure on cooking fuel (e.g.
kerosene, charcoal and similar); electricity, gas (LPG), rate of deforestation and plans for
reforestation, and types of woodlots
The availability of water supplies
 200-300 liters of water are needed daily for commercial fuel briquettes making
10 liters of clean drinking water for producers (daily)
 Trap and recycle used water during fuel briquettes pressing process
 Whether there is sufficient space for the production activity
 Enough space, room or ground is needed
 Storage space must be dry and well aerated
 Space for decomposing a good number of rows of raw materials
Whether there are sufficient resources for production
 Raw materials for fuel briquettes production
  • Funds
  • Time
  • Hot weather
  • Human labor
  • Equipment (e.g. press machine and chopper/thresher)
The commitment of the group/trainees
  • Preparedness to source materials, invest their time and energy
  • Regular production
  • Self-monitoring and evaluation
  • Consultations and meet consultancy expenses
  • Assess financial feasibility during this first visit
SECOND SITE VISIT (Length: 1 Day)
Involves a full day of meetings in order to:
Refine the Selection Process of Trainees to ensure success of the activity, and ascertain whether
trainees are ready and willing. Find out if:
  • There are interested groups; venue is available and any deterrent factor?
  • The community is aware of alternative sources of cooking energy?
  • Any perception of wood fuel availability and environmental impact?
  • There are any other suggestions
  •  Demonstrate Fuel Briquettes Making and Cooking
 Briquette Making
Successful demonstration needs:
§ Equipment for briquetting
§ Raw materials (readily decomposed)
§ Water
§ Labor
 Cooking Demonstration
Involves:
§ Stoves
§ Food to be cooked
§ Some dry briquettes
§ Eating the cooked food
§ Allaying any fears
§ Grasping briquettes lighting and replacement during burning process
§ Comments from trainees

Decomposing
  • Use usual decomposing procedures but do not add soil
  • The material should not decompose into compost fertilizer, about 4 weeks maximum
  • Make successive heaps of 50cm high x 1metre wide x 5metres long rows to avoid
  • missing what to briquette
  • Dry decomposed material and store safely to save pounding time and trouble
  • Mixing/Blending the Materials after Decomposing
  • Suitably decomposed material can be blended
  • Pound in mortar, adding water in bits
  • Conduct three hand tests which apply to materials that require chopping/milling:
§ Ooze test – Scoop some materials into your fist then squeeze; if it oozes through
your fingers, it is too ripe
§ Spring back test – If the material expands when squeezed in your hand, it is not
ready
§ Shake test – Material well decomposed, when squeezed in your hand and then
shaken vertically, never falls apart

The Press and Briquette Making
Prepare material for press making using available measurements from the trainer
§ The press machine compresses fuel briquettes into uniform shapes and sizes
better than bare hands
o When decomposed material is ready, start fuel briquetting. Let different groups produce
different blends
Six people can produce 750 –1000 fuel briquettes per 8 hrs, daily
§ Holey briquettes dry faster and burn effectively
Follow procedures for quality fuel briquettes making (e.g., right blending and ingredients
measure, pressing, drying, storage, protection from wetness, etc.)
Handle wet fuel briquettes with care and dry them in direct hot sun for 3–6 days,
electricity/solar dryer or in a dark well-aerated place – but this takes time
 Press Maintenance
  • Ensure care to lengthen its lifespan
  • Do not dry it in the sun to avoid cracking
  • Preserve it with waterproof paints
  • Oil or grease the nuts
  • Keep under shade or cover it when not in use

Friday, July 22, 2011

KARC COLLECTION OF POVERTY TO SCHOOLS

The above is Home for BALUKU AMOS with 13 children and all stay in the above Home or hause,others along streets,kasese uganda.

The bellow is AFRICAN ARK ADOPTED CHILDREN,We thank the PREM RAWAT FOUNDATION USA FOR MEALS AND WATER GRANT



Saturday, April 16, 2011

HOME PAGE




BACKGROUND

Kikumu women organizations in Kasese in Uganda and KIVU DRCT. The overall plan of KARC was to promote sustainable women development by creating community education and support for advocacy strategies relevant to the marginalized rural women development needs of the rural areas and slum communities in Rwenzori region through involvement local communities in identifying their needs and developing possible solutions that are appropriate for improving and transforming social, economic, cultural and political situations in Kasese district and Rwenzori region in general.
The organization comprises of girls and women, who are qualified and experienced specialist in the field of social agricultural research center is a community based and charitable non-government organization. It was initiated in 1999 after ADF wars in Kasese ,Bundibugyo districts and network work, lawyers, teachers, doctors and agriculturalists. It is women original knowledge centre proved to create sustainable women development in rural areas.

 (a) GOAL

 To pave ways to fight women poverty through participatory, collaborative for economic empowerment .
(b)MISSION
Improve local grass root communities in achieving a society of transformation in women development in political, economic and socio-cultural aspects for sustainable development.

VISSION

Working for well developed strengthen and active healthy society that respect women dignity ,economic empowerment, Research, food security, training for development for mutual social relationship and sustainable community women resource utilization


OBJECTIVES OF KARC

1. Promote  women and women empowerment through small-scale sustainable agriculture development in the communities.
2. Promote and develop environment through fighting pollution and desertification.
3. Promote advocacy strategies for marginalized human rights and peace building initiatives in the communities.

For women and children, the human rights and related projects for sustainable development have been created.

4. Promotion and support of community health programs geared towards health improvement in the doubly marginalized communities
5. Training programs appropriate for community development.
KARC has training centres as
African Ark open society institute for Training of women vocational subjects
                                         
African Ark infant prep school Center for Care and Educational Relief for Orphans. Under training programs we also handle seminars, workshops on HIV/AIDS, child abuse, agriculture modernization.

6. Research and information management on communities in kasese.
6. Social welfare and counseling of HIV/AIDS, survivors, Torture, disasters, refugees.
7. Library services

KARC ACTIVITIES/PROGRAMS

1.                  General Health.
HIV/AIDS, palliative care, Malaria and Women reproductive health (fistula)

2.                  Human rights of doubly marginalized communities
Peace building, Conflict resolution, Domestic, Sexual violence, gender issues, Defilement and Child abuse democratic rights.

3.                  Agriculture
Organic farming, Sustainable agriculture modernization and Bee keeping, Fruits management, Small scale Animal rearing, Tree planting
Kitchen garden and urban farming, environmental conservation.

4.                  Training
Work shop/ demonstration plots, Vocational training, Nursery training of orphans (primary education), General education and community library

5.                  Social welfare
Help survivors, marginalized groups, organized violence, HIV/AIDS,counselling.

6.                  Food security
Fruit management, Kitchen gardening, Bee keeping, Small scale animals rearing, Food conservation and storage, Agro food processing and craning and Food baking.

ACHIEVEMENTS

Ø      TRAINED 200 girls and women in Democratic republic of congo,200 in kasse,100 women exchange visity in Uganda and congo post war sexual violence against women in conflict in eastern kivu congo and  western Uganda.women have human rights and empowerment skills.
Ø     
Ø      200 women and girld trained in herbal medicine for self reliance,200 for vocational training
Ø      KARC Has achieved 5 plots of land after KCCL ,20 Acres of land,1 acre for primary school and construction shall be with immediate effect.By jully 2010 house of 130 by 20 feet shall have been made for the herbal institute thus african ark open society institute.
Ø      Scholarship  by  has been made and 300 students/pupils are admited by accademic year  and now 800 women have got scholarship.
Ø      LEGALITY. We have secured certificates of registration Kasese District and KADNET
Ø      The institute has 180 students female,17 tutors and full computer laboratory
Ø      We have sytem of coorperation and coordination with students,council and this has created Employment for completing students.
Ø      Staff welfare is in the way and all staff members take lunch to ensure effective classroom management .
Ø      The increase in enrolment  
Ø      Secured meals for orphans from The prem Rawate foundation USA,HERBAL training from ass The Marie Schlei Association Germany,charles kima ICT training
Ø      Ngene Hellen was trained in ICT  by uganda women network
Ø      Completion of research in cancer,orphan care,education,maleria in children.
Ø      Construction of 12 classese,2 toilets  for girl child education  for ophan adoption school with 350 orphans primary education
Ø      Trained 300 women in tomoto cultivation and processing in rural areas.
Ø      150 women and girl were given 100,goats and 700 local chicken 2010,59 sexual WORKERS were empowered with capital each 500,000 UGX.
Ø      We have trained 233 women and girls paralegals in kasese for women justice and foster women rights
Ø      Kima chales funded KARC website




KARC TARET GROUP
Ø      Vulnerable women, children.
ORGAN GRAM
1.      KARC foundation structure has the highest policy making organ as the general assembly of members
2.      Board of directors are in charge of policy making and overall supervision of policy implementation

The executive committee with coming up policy proposals to the general assembly of members and implementation of decisions and policies made by the general assembly of members. The executive committee supervises the affairs of the organization and appoints the members of the secretariat

The executive committee comprises of, chairman, vice chairman, treasurer, general secretary, legal adviser, technical advisor, one members .

3.      Secretariat is headed by executive director. It comprises of coordinator, program officers, accountant, cashier, head master, teachers and principal.

Each program is attached to volunteer for effectiveness.

KARC SCOPE

Areas covered include;
Kasese town, Hima, Kyarumba,kasese town, L. Katwe, Kisinga, Kyondo, Mahango, Muhokya, Karusandara and Rukoki  in Uganda and LUBIRIHA KIVU DRC.

KARC CORE VALUES


Vertical and lateral accountability, Transparency, Gender sensitivity and Respect for nature resource utilization and respect for women.

  PARTNERS

Kasese district local Government, Kidima community health foundation, Kasese district development net work, Mbarara institute for social development,,FOWODI, Kasese catholic diocese, Mughete catholic church, Kasese cathedral united apostolic church, UNASO Kampala, IRIN USA,CTA Netherlands, Project hope UK, and Work aid UK,VGIF USA, The Marie Schlei Association ,The Prem Rawate Foundation USA and Uganda women network.

KARC is growing organization implementing of programmes and support the marginalized women in communities for sustainable development geared towards meeting organization goal’’ to pave the ways to fight Women poverty in the communities ”

KARC MOTTO; “service for women development”
For more information contact: -


1.       Nigheart N  Josiline chairperson
P.O
Box 263
Kasese
+256756987602


2.       Miss Masika Ngene  Hellen
codinator of programs
box  c/o 590
Kasese town council.



Website:






Tuesday, February 15, 2011

kasese health risk -cholera,poor latrines kasese

kasese District is to recieve massive cholera outbreak,we conducted survellence  in december 2010 wider population in kasese dont use latrines rather use the bushes around families see latrine above.
subcounties affected includes muhokya,lake katwe,lake regions,kasese manicipal council,kitswamba,HIMA,kyarumba,kyondo,munkunyu,kisinga,nyakiyumbu,karambi,mpondwe,katolu,mahangu,bugoye,karusandara.
NEXT 5 years kasese is to recieve cholera out break
The main objective of a sanitation system is to protect and promote human health by providing a clean environment and breaking the cycle of disease. In order to be sustainable, a sanitation system has to be not only economically viable, socially acceptable, and technically and institutionally appropriate, it should also protect the environment and the natural resources

  • Uganda wide some 7.6 million people without access to any kind of improved sanitation

  • 2.2 million deaths caused by sanitation-related diseases and poor hygienic conditions

  • most affected group: children under the age of 5

  • progress towards the MDG in sanitation is much too slow, particularly in Sub-Saharan Africa

  • sanitation rarely receives the required attention and priority by politicians and civil societies alike despite its key importance on many other sectors and for achieving most of the MDGs

  • the political will has been largely lacking when it comes to place sanitation high on the international development agenda


  • bee keeping kasese









    Noah forest action in kasese