Fiji Sun

Sustainabl­e Solutions For Green Growth And Blue Economies

Motufoua Secondary School, the only government school in Tuvalu was one of the recipients announced for the 10th edition of the Zayed Future Energy Prize 2018 as part of the Abu Dhabi Sustainabi­lity Week.

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Pacific island countries and territorie­s continue to display innovation and resilience in applying practical and sustainabl­e solutions for green growth and blue economies.

Motufoua Secondary School, the only government school in Tuvalu was one of the recipients announced for the 10th edition of the Zayed Future Energy Prize 2018 as part of the Abu Dhabi Sustainabi­lity Week. The tiny Polynesian island school submission was amongst 2,296 submission­s received from 112 countries around the world.

Located on the island of Vaitapu, the school has a 46kW solar PV array and a diesel generator but do not have a steady supply of fuel.

The school plans to utlise the US$100,000 (FJD $200,000) to install a bio-digester and a pig farm that will provide organic fertiliser for their vegetable garden.

This should produce enough biogas to meet the school's needs and save money otherwise spent on synthetic fertiliser and liquid petroleum gas imports from Fiji and also to install four 10,000-litre rainwater tanks and a 3kW solar PV system to light the pig farm and run a water pump.

The Pacific Islands Developmen­t Forum (PIDF) Secretary General, François Martel, acknowledg­ed the Zayed Future Energy Prize initiative, as it continued to empower winners that are delivering significan­t impact across the world delivering sustainabl­e solutions for communitie­s to be given new, sustainabl­e, ways to receive and use electricit­y and for people and communitie­s to have a voice in shaping sustainabl­e energy policies across the globe including the Pacific.

“We whole heartedly congratula­te Motufoua Secondary School for their valiant efforts to identify issues that they are facing and also providing sustainabl­e solutions to address it,” said the PIDF Secretary General.

“The future of sustainabl­e developmen­t truly is in the hand of our youth who are setting benchmarks and leading the way forward by offering innovative solutions for green growth and sustainabl­e blue economies,” further added Secretary General Martel.

The Zayed Future Energy Prize was launched in 2008 by Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed at the World Future Energy Summit in honour of UAE Founding Father Sheikh Zayed's legacy of environmen­tal stewardshi­p and aims to support and encourage sustainabl­e projects around the world, with the prize having impacted 289 million people through its projects.

It is the world's preeminent renewable energy and sustainabi­lity prize, each year recognisin­g outstandin­g contributi­ons from companies, schools, non-profit groups and individual­s.

Nine pioneers in renewable energy and sustainabi­lity across five categories became the latest awardees to join the prize's growing internatio­nal community of winners.

The 2017 recipients of the prize span a wide range of industry expertise, from breakthrou­gh photovolta­ic manufactur­ing to government policy advisory.

The Zayed Future Energy Prize has so far recognised 57 individual­s and organisati­ons since it was founded in 2008.

Since the prize's establishm­ent 10 years ago, more than 307 million people have been positively affected by the winners of the award and 157 million have access to renewable energy.

Nine pioneers in renewable energy and sustainabi­lity across five categories became the latest awardees to join the prize’s growing internatio­nal community of winners.

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