Thursday, April 25, 2024

How I turn cow-dung at my farm into millions

48-year-old Dominic Wanjihia is the owner of the eco-resource Centre in Karen called Biogas International CEO Dominic Wanjihia.

A lot of the gadgets Wanjihia has developed since his School years at St Mary’s School in Nairobi, have revolved around energy and farming, but it is in the world of biogas that he has cut a niche.

His recent innovation — the flexi-biogas system, a portable tube that processes cow dung and other waste, has come to the attention of outside governments and local manufacturers, some of whom have ordered units in the hundreds for pilot projects.

“The Rwandese government ordered one hundred units from us to distribute to low-income farmers and in schools.”

Wanjihia takes pride in the affordability of his innovation to local folk, as well as its ability to produce more than conventional systems.

“In East Africa, a conventional small system costs about Sh200,000 but it won’t produce enough gas to cook githeri for three hours, and poorer people still can’t afford it. Ours comes in three sizes cost Sh40,000 for the small, Sh55,000 for the medium and Sh70,000 for the large and is enough to cook for hours and do other things.”

Another departure from convention: Wanjihia’s flexi-biogas system needs only one cow on hand to operate and apart from cow dung, it can run on kitchen, chicken, pig, elephant, human and other animal wastes.

“The regular dome systems need four to five cows to produce 1,000 litres of gas. They are constructed underground and you need to own the land. How many people have Sh200,000 to spare, own a piece of land and four to five cows?”

While other systems take up to a week to install, Wanjihia’s system is up in a few hours and running in days. To generate biogas, farmers put dung and water into the portable PVC digester, which eventually produces a constant supply of energy as long as it is fed daily.

A nature enthusiast, he explains that one of his motivations in engaging in the fuel was to reduce the cutting down of trees, starting explorations in biogas after a challenge thrown by his sister, a wildlife conservationist.

“She asked me to come up with a solution to the rapid deforestation behind the Nairobi National Park caused by Maasai community members who were shedding the nomadic life.”

The community did not adapt his technology, but other farmers took interest in it, encouraging the innovator to go on. Apart from its use in cooking, biogas finds other uses on farms. It is disposed of while at the same time pumping water, powering chaff cutters, milking, cooling and drying machines. Its solid waste can also be used as organic fertiliser.

With the help of a generator, Wanjihia demonstrates to us how it can produce electricity and light bulbs. “You can use it for absolutely anything.”

Embarking on his biogas journey spurred him to come up with more innovations. He built a vegetable and fruit drier, which runs on the gas, a Sh30,000 innovation that gives farmers an alternative from throwing away excess produce after harvesting. Wanjihia also shows us a biogas powered chick brooder he built to keep newly hatched chicks warm, a large cooker for schools that cuts cooking time by more than half, and a fridge-like cooling system.

He does not see himself as doing anything particularly radical, averring that his inventions are simple innovations of existing knowledge, using local material.

He is enthusiastic about knowledge being accessible, putting the descriptions to some of his designs online on maker websites.

“A lot of the tools I have designed are to alleviate challenges and help people. I don’t have the time or energy to sell these products to people, I would rather they get their fundis to make them.”

Choosing not to attend college or university, all his knowledge was self-taught. “I was fed up with being told what to do by teachers. I was a free spirited kid.”

His earlier inventions include a device to talk under water and an overhead bridge for monkeys to avoid getting knocked down by cars, which is used today in Madagascar and Australia. He has also produced tools, water pumps, electric solar devices for fuel, and an anti-malarial device.

Wanjhia is currently setting up a fuel station that can enable tuk tuks to run on biogas. Wanjihia does not give figures for how much these may retail at, but mentions that a large cylinder of compressed gas, which can run four households for a month, sells at Sh1,500.

“Millions of tuk tuks in India are running on natural gas. What we’ve invented and patented here is the scrubber, which cleans up biogas and turns it into bio methane, which is the same as compressed natural gas. We’re localising the technology at affordable rates”

Localisation and affordability are key themes in his work.

“We put three criteria into the making of things: sustainability, affordability, accessibility. I’ll make everything from here, I’m not going to import anything, apart from the digester where the pipes and tarpaulin are not locally available.”

Plans for a biogas fuel station will take a few months, but he eventually hopes to have a commercial agent model where other people can become independent power producers.

Another plan he aims to implement is to build a floating platform in Lake Victoria, using hyacinth as food stock to produce energy.

Apart from coming up with practical innovations, Wanjihia also wants to inspire and nurture the growth of youthful inventors through Simply Logic, an incubation platform for young techies interested in furthering their inventions.

“Innovators have a very rough time not being listened to and not being noticed. Always being told their inventions won’t work, no-one will give them the break they need.

The majority of people get stuck at prototype level. They don’t have money to make them and are afraid that if they share their ideas, they’ll get stolen.”

His role models are Robert Stirling, the Wright Brothers and scientist Albert Einstein. “They achieved what was impossible; people who basically went against the norm and did stuff that was not supposed to be done.”

For his passion in coming up with affordable, innovative solutions to energy challenges, Wanjihia was awarded the Renewable Energy Innovator of the year award by the World Energy Engineering Congress at its annual awards ceremony in Washington DC in 2013.

The International Fund for Agricultural Development (Ifad) also teamed up with him to install nine systems on dairy farms in Kenya as part of a commercialisation programme for smallholder dairy farmers.

Mr. Wanjihia can be reached through: 0772 700530 or Email: [email protected]

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