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Keywords
Climate (campaign title)
Containers
Day
Drinking water
KWCI (GPI)
One person
Outdoors
Salt Mining
Solar energy
Villages
Water pollution
Solar-powered Water Desalination
A woman walks to get water past the lurid illustrations of a fresh water tanker in Kotri village, Rajasthan. Fetching water in villages such as Kotri is typically the work of women. Groundwater in this area is heavily contaminated as a result of a nearby salt lake, and residents must depend on government tankers for fresh water supply, or import tankers privately if they can afford it. Many can’t, and are forced to drink the saline groundwater.
Unique identifier:
GP026MY
Type:
Image
Shoot date:
10/08/2010
Locations:
Asia
,
India
,
Rajasthan
,
Tilonia
Credit line:
© Prashanth Vishwanathan / Greenpeace
Ranking:
★★★★ (E)
Containers
Shoot:
Solar-powered Water Desalination in Rajasthan
The Sambhar Salt Lake is India's largest lake, situated in east-central Rajasthan. The population that lives nearby are facing increasing water shortage not just due to changing rain patterns and the rapid desertification of the state, but also as the salt lake has salinated the groundwater supply for many kilometres around. With no alternative in the dry months, many are forced to drink the heavily-salted water. Yet in Kotri village, Ajmer district, residents can now draw clean drinking water from a reverse osmosis plant powered by solar photovoltaic panels. The technician who cares for the system is a local villager who received little formal education yet learned to manage the plant in just six days. Around one thousand people draw safe water from the plant, which produces 500-600 litres of fresh water per hour.
Related Collections:
Decentralised Renewable Energy Report (All Photographers)
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