The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Ugandans cook up eco-friendly dryer to cut food waste

- John Okot

At their workshop in a Kampala suburb, Lawrence Oke ayot and his business partner, both in their mid-20s, drilled holes and screws into a steel-lined, green wooden box designed to dry food in an ecofriendl­y way.

Their invention, a low-tech thermal dehydrator, can be used to process fruits like mango, banana and pineapple, as well as vegetables such as okra and eggplant, to stop them spoiling.

It uses heat from brique es made of discarded paper and other natural materials, including garden waste.

Food waste is a big challenge in Africa, with about half of crops lost due to poor harvesting techniques and handling a erwards, according to the UN Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on.

Oke ayot had a light-bulb moment in 2016 when his uncle decided to quit farming out of frustratio­n over his produce going to waste because he could not find a ready market.

Having grown up in northern Uganda, where a two-decade insurgency by the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA), a brutal rebel group, caused widespread food shortages, Oke ayot thought hard about a solution.

A er completing their studies in mechanical engineerin­g, he and his childhood friend, Morris Opiyo, embarked on making their first dryer to preserve food. It worked well and was ‘a good inspiratio­n’, Oke ayot said.

Since then, the pair have made 43 dryers and sold them across Uganda, Rwanda, Zimbabwe and Burkina Faso to individual farmers.

They now have plans to ship some to Central African Republic and Mauritius.

The ‘sparky dryer’ has a chamber which is lined with steel and insulated with a thick layer of wood to minimise heat loss.

A fan on top allows air to flow into the heating chamber so that few brique es need to be burned to keep it hot.

The heat is transferre­d to the drying zone where the sliced foodstuff is stacked on shelves.

A catalytic converter also prevents harmful gases from escaping, reducing toxic byproducts like carbon monoxide from the smoke-free brique es and enabling the dryer to operate with zero planet-warming emissions.

Two kilogramme­s of brique es are needed to dry 10 kg of mangoes in five hours.

In Uganda alone, 30 per cent of crops are lost every year a er harvest, with fruits and grains most affected, said Solomon Kalema, a spokesman for the Ministry of Agricultur­e.

The East African country has few food processing hubs, but Kalema said government plans to install them at a regional level had not been implemente­d due to limited funds.

In most cases, Ugandan farmers prefer to sun-dry their leafy vegetables, as they contain li le moisture and are quick to dry, he noted.

But fruits take longer out in the open, especially in the wet season, so most farmers end up leaving them to rot.

“This affects the quality of commoditie­s and also farmers’ earnings,” Kalema said.

The government relies on extension workers to train farmers to keep their produce in good condition, but the number of agents is stretched thin due to financial constraint­s, he added.

In 2010, Uganda had one extension worker per 1,000 farmers but now each agent must serve 15,000.

Samalie Namukose, a principle nutritioni­st at the Ministry of Health, believes the government should invest in cheaper dryers, like those made by Oke ayot, to support local farmers.

“It’s something new to many, and there is need for more publicity about it,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

In general, food dryers - which are mostly solar-powered – are expensive and beyond the means of low-earning farmers, even though they are cost-effective, she said.

On the Ugandan market, a typical small solar-powered dryer costs more than 2 million Ugandan shillings (US$542), while a large model can top 9 million shillings.

But Oke ayot is aiming for something more affordable – his small dryers are priced at 450,000 shillings each and a big one is double that.

The machine claims to be ecofriendl­y, partly because it does not make heat from charcoal, the most common source of energy in Uganda, with 90 per cent of the population still using it for cooking.

Pader district in northern Uganda, where Oke ayot’s home town is located, has become a hub for commercial charcoal production, which is made by smoulderin­g wood.

The fuel has an environmen­tal cost, contributi­ng to Uganda’s 63 per cent loss of forest cover in the last 25 years, according to the National Forestry Authority.

Oke ayot and Opiyo hope their dryers can help protect forests by offering an alternativ­e.

The brique es they use are made of waste paper and other materials, including fruit peel, sawdust and clay soil.

The ingredient­s are mixed with water and moulded into balls, then dried to make the brique es.

The dryers also heat up more slowly than with charcoal, reducing the risk of burning food, Opiyo said.

Christine Anek, a Pader resident, was trained by Oke ayot to make brique es from garden waste at an outreach session.

The farmer, also a nurse, now sells dried fruit snacks to supplement her daily income.

Oke ayot and Opiyo are planning to fight food waste at the village level through a system to help farmers afford a dryer.

Farmers will form into groups and receive a unit on credit, paying for it in instalment­s.

But before the pair can really expand their business, they need more skilled labour.

“Our goal is to open up an academy where we can train many youths, but this will require time and preparatio­n,” Oke ayot said. — Reuters

Our goal is to open up an academy where we can train many youths, but this will require time and preparatio­n.

Lawrence Oke ayot

 ?? — Reuters photos ?? Oke ayot works on a ‘sparky’ food dryer at their workshop in Kampala, Uganda.
— Reuters photos Oke ayot works on a ‘sparky’ food dryer at their workshop in Kampala, Uganda.
 ??  ?? Opiyo makes a dryer made from locally sourced materials.
Opiyo makes a dryer made from locally sourced materials.
 ??  ?? Anek explains how she uses her eco-friendly food dryer.
Anek explains how she uses her eco-friendly food dryer.
 ??  ?? Opiyo shows off a stove that uses eco-friendly brique es or garden waste to produce heat in Kampala, Uganda.
Opiyo shows off a stove that uses eco-friendly brique es or garden waste to produce heat in Kampala, Uganda.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia