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Community Power Corporation has successfully tested its new
Community Productive Use Platform (C-PUP) at the Productive
Rural Enterprise coir fiber processing facility in Aklan
Province, Philippines. Developed and deployed under
cost-shared contracts with the US Department of Energy, the
National Renewable Energy Laboratory, and the World Bank
Development Marketplace, the C-PUP is a renewable energy-based
adaptation of the Multi-purpose Platform first introduced in
Africa by the United Nations (IFAD/UNDP/UNIDO). A June
2002 Workshop on Productive Uses of Renewable Energy conducted
by the Global Environment Facility and the Food and
Agriculture Organization of the United Nations found that "in
rural areas of developing countries, small amounts of
energy-in the form of electricity, heat, and motive power-can
have very positive impacts on income, education, health, and
food security". As a result, programs to support productive
uses of renewable energy are becoming higher on the agenda of
many development agencies, bilateral donors, NGOs and private
sector companies. Rural people need access to small amounts of
high quality productive power in order to add maximum value to
their agricultural, forest and marine resources. The C-PUP
converts local biomass residues into different forms of power
that can be applied to a myriad of productive use
applications. For example, at a small coconut processing
facility in the Philippines CPC demonstrated the ability to
simultaneously grind husks and shells using shaft power, light
the facility and pump water using electrical power, and dry
fiber using thermal power. As shown in the attached
photo, the heart of the C-PUP is CPC's Gas Production Module
that can convert a variety of woody residues (such as coconut
shells in the Philippines) to a fuel-gas for delivery to a
spark-ignited engine mounted on a power distribution
platform. The platform allocates about 25 shaft
horsepower to various mechanical and electrical loads (see
photo). The peak electrical output of the C-PUP is 15 kWe and
uses about 23 kg of coconut shells per hour. In addition,
about 15 kW of thermal energy is available in the form of
clean, hot air for drying crops. Over the first several months
of startup trials, the CPUP has processed more than 50 metric
tonnes of coconut husks. Biopower is the ideal energy source
for rural enterprise. Modular biopower is the least cost
approach when compared to other renewable energy resources
such as photovoltaics and wind. Sustainable quantities of
biomass residues for small power applications are available in
most rural, agricultural-based, communities throughout the
world. With CPC's biopower technology, these residues can be
converted to high quality power to drive productive
electrical, mechanical and thermal loads. Biomass also
produces thermal power which wind and photovoltaics do not.
Productive Rural Enterprise (PRE) was recently formed by CPC
and local Philippine partners to employ rural people, operate
and maintain the C-PUP, and make geo-textiles from coconut
byproducts for sale to domestic and export customers. The PRE
business model, using the C-PUP, is replicable in most
developing countries where rural economic development is
needed. |