Terra Watt Prize: New Competition Seeks Affordable Energy Solutions for the Poor
Posted by Chad Lipton
Jan 29, 2014 2:00 PM ET
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The Great Energy Challenge Energy Blog
Terra Watt Prize: New Competition Seeks Affordable Energy Solutions for the Poor
More than 1.3 billion people, or approximately one-fifth of the world’s population, live without access to an electrical grid. That is roughly five times the number of people living in the United States, a country that is so plugged-in that access to electricity is all but taken for granted.
In places without electricity, kerosene has become the most common option for lighting. But kerosene is dangerous, dirty, expensive, and inefficient. People who burn kerosene, wood, and other fuels for energy face dire health consequences, including burns and respiratory disease. Alternative energy sources exist, but it is a challenge to get them into the hands of the global poor. National Geographic has taken up the challenge. In a sustainable energy call-to-arms, National Geographic has launched the Terra Watt Prize, a competition to identify and implement cleaner, safer, and cheaper alternative energy solutions to communities that do not have access to the electrical grid. Read more on The Great Energy Challenge Energy Blog.