HAVE just seen the Falkirk Wheel today while driving through Scotland. When all the world wondered how to raise a boat or ship faster from one level to another, instead of using the very tedious locks process that’s done at the Panama Canal, an engineer in 2001 used the principle of Archimedes and was able to lift a boat thirty meters high in a few minutes.
I’ve just returned from seeing this marvelous invention at work! Today’s world is all about new ideas that are changing the way we live. Just because something existed from the time you were born, doesn’t mean you accept that it continues to be that way: That’s how the motor car was invented, the aeroplane, the computer,so look around you and think, what you can change by putting your thinking cap on:
When Cynthia Koenig, a young social entrepreneur from New York, learned that millions of girls and women around the world spent hours each day collecting water from distant sources, she decided to create a new way to help people in poor communities transport water and it’s called the WaterWheel. Koenig’s WaterWheel allows people to roll water in a 50-liter container versus carrying in 5 gallon (19 liter) jugs. Koenig estimates that the WaterWheel can save women 35 hours per week in water transport time, as well as preventing the physical strain that comes from balancing 40 pounds of water on top of their heads for hours each day.
Every day around the world, over 200 million hours are spent each day fetching water, often from water sources miles from home, and this task usually falls to women and girls. By freeing up valuable time, the WaterWheel allows women to spend time on income-generating activities that can help pull her family out of poverty. The time savings also means that there is a greater likelihood that girls will be allowed to stay in school, further reducing the rate of intergenerational poverty.
After receiving a $100,000 Grand Challenges Canada prize to develop the WaterWheel, Koenig founded a social enterprise company, Wello. The company is in an early stage of development and has been piloting the WaterWheel in rural communities in India. Koenig also plans on continuing to make the WaterWheel itself more useful by adding in filtration, drip irrigation kits, even a cell phone charger that uses the rotation of the wheel to charge the battery of the cell phone and give people more access to essentials like communication and education.
It’s a different world today, where new inventions, new ideas are created and help inventors make millions: Also, it’s not just about money, but helping people live an easier life, maybe helping the disabled with a user-friendly wheel chair or whatever! Look around and think! It can be something for your home, something for yourself; that’s how great inventions come about! Learn to think creatively..!
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