Inventor Dean Kamen wants to put entrepreneurs to work
bringing water and electricity to the world's poor
By Erick Schonfeld, Business 2.0 Magazine editor-at-large
February 16, 2006: 2:06 PM EST
San Francisco (Business 2.0) - Dean Kamen, the engineer who invented the
Segway, is puzzling over a new equation these days. An estimated 1.1 billion
people in the world don't have access to clean drinking water, and an
estimated 1.6 billion don't have electricity. Those figures add up to a big
problem for the world—and an equally big opportunity for entrepreneurs.
To solve the problem, he's invented two devices, each about the size of a
washing machine that can provide much-needed power and clean water in rural
villages.
"Eighty percent of all the diseases you could name would be wiped out if you
just gave people clean water," says Kamen. "The water purifier makes 1,000
liters of clean water a day, and we don't care what goes into it. And the
power generator makes a kilowatt off of anything that burns."
Light in the darkness
Kamen is not alone in his quest. He's been joined by Iqbal Quadir, the
founder of Grameen Phone, the largest cell phone company in Bangladesh. Last
year, Quadir took prototypes of Kamen's power machines to two villages in
his home country for a six-month field trial. That trial, which ended last
September, sold Quadir on the technology.
So much so in fact that Quadir's startup, Cambridge, Mass.-based Emergence
Energy, is negotiating with Kamen's Deka Research and Development to license
the technology. Quadir then hopes to raise $30 million in venture capital to
start producing the power machines. (With the exception of the Segway, which
Kamen's own company sold, Kamen has typically licensed his inventions to
others.)
The electric generator is powered by an easily-obtained local fuel: cow
dung. Each machine continuously outputs a kilowatt of electricity. That may
not sound like much, but it is enough to light 70 energy-efficient bulbs. As
Kamen puts it, "If you judiciously use a kilowatt, each villager can have a
nighttime."
A satellite picture of the earth at night shows swaths of darkness across
Southeast Asia, the Middle East, and Africa. For the people living there, a
simple light bulb would mean an extension of both their productivity and
their leisure times.
Entrepreneurial power
The real invention here, though, may be the economic model that Kamen and
Quadir hope to use to distribute the machines. It is fashioned after Grameen
Phone's business, where village entrepreneurs (mostly women) are given
micro-loans to purchase a cell phone and service. The women, in turn, charge
other villagers to make calls.
"We have 200,000 rural entrepreneurs who are selling telephone services in
their communities," notes Quadir. "The vision is to replicate that with
electricity."
During the test in Bangladesh, Kamen's Stirling machines created three
entrepreneurs in each village: one to run the machine and sell the
electricity, one to collect dung from local farmers and sell it to the first
entrepreneur, and a third to lease out light bulbs (and presumably, in the
future, other appliances) to the villagers.
Kamen thinks the same approach can work with his water-cleaning machine,
which he calls the Slingshot. While the Slingshot wasn't part of Quadir's
trial in Bangladesh, Kamen thinks it can be distributed the same way. "In
the 21st century, water will be delivered by an entrepreneur," he predicts.
The Slingshot works by taking in contaminated water – even raw sewage -- and
separating out the clean water by vaporizing it. It then shoots the
remaining sludge back out a plastic tube. Kamen thinks it could be paired
with the power machine and run off the other machine's waste heat.
Compared to building big power and water plants, Kamen's approach has the
virtue of simplicity. He even created an instruction sheet to go with each
Slingshot. It contains one step: Just add water, any water. Step two might
be: add an entrepreneur.
"Not required are engineers, pipelines, epidemiologists, or
microbiologists," says Kamen. "You don't need any -ologists. You don't need
any building permits, bribery, or bureaucracies."
The price of freedom
Still, even if some of the technical challenges have been solved ("I know
the technology works and I'd fall on my sword to prove it," insists Kamen),
the economic challenges still loom.
Kamen's goal is to produce machines that cost $1,000 to $2,000 each. That's
a far cry from the $100,000 that each hand-machined prototype cost to build.
Quadir is going to try and see if the machines can be produced economically
by a factory in Bangladesh. If the numbers work out, not only does he think
that distributing them in a decentralized fashion will be good business --
he also thinks it will be good public policy. Instead of putting up a
500-megawatt power plant in a developing country, he argues, it would be
much better to place 500,000 one-kilowatt power plants in villages all over
the place, because then you would create 500,000 entrepreneurs.
"Isn't that better for democracy?" Quadir asks. "We see a shortage of
democracy in the world, and we are surprised. If you strengthen the economic
hands of people, you will foster real democracy."
Lights, water, freedom. Now that's entrepreneurial.
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