Good News: A Bright Idea For Cleaner Air, A Home Harvest For Food Supplies And Fighting Fire With Fungi

Inspiring stories from across the country that show how seemingly complex problems can have simple solutions

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Inspiring stories from across the country that show how seemingly complex problems can have simple solutions

Ironing carts are a fairly common sight in most neighbourhoods and the street in Tiruvannamalai, Tamil Nadu, where 14-year-old Vinisha Umashankar lives is no exception. As she watched the cart owner use charcoal to heat his heavy cast-iron box, the class nine student realized that the process was one that contributed heavily to both land and air pollution. She began researching a better way and came up with a solution in two months—an ironing cart with a solar-panelled roof that charges a 100 Ah battery to produce 250 watts of power in an hour. Five hours of sunshine can fully charge the battery, which powers the iron for six hours. It can also run a coin-operated PCO, and USB mobile charging points for added income.

With an estimated 10 million ironing carts in India burning a total of 50 million kgs of charcoal daily, Umashankar’s clean-energy innovation has the potential to transform a carbon-footprint-heavy industry, reduce the burden of pollution and save millions of trees. She received the Swedish Children’s Climate Prize in the clean air category this year for her brilliant idea.

Source: The Logical Indian

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When 22-year-old Dubai-based Sijo Zachariah landed in Kerala to attend a family wedding earlier this year, the last thing he expected was a nationwide lockdown and travel ban. Even more worrisome was the thought of dwindling food supplies as stores remained shuttered and shop shelves went empty. “That’s when the whole thing struck me,” he tells Associated Press. “What’s going to happen? How are we going to feed ourselves?”

Interestingly enough, the solution was right there at home. Along with his father, a long-time gardening enthusiast, Zachariah collected seeds from whatever fruits and vegetables were available at the grocer’s and planted them on their family’s plot of land, which already had coconuts, jackfru...

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