Solar Cold Storage |
Perishable food
especially fresh fruits and vegetables usually get wasted as soon as
they are harvested because they are cut off from their source of water
and nutrition.
They lose weight,
texture, flavour and nutritional value. Cooling significantly slows down
the rate of deterioration, thus increasing storage life of the produce.
Against this
backdrop, two scientists--Hadija Nantambi Ssekyondwa, a graduate of
Technology and Industrial Development from Makerere University, and
Sylvia Namazzi, a plant breeder and an expert in seed systems--developed
a cold storage facility.
It is an integrated
solar powered walk-in cold room that can help in off-grid storage and
preservation to address post-harvest losses in fruits, vegetables and
other perishable food like meat.
Ms Ssekyondwa, who
graduated last year, analysed the challenge of lack of storage for
perishable produce, and ventured into developing solar-powered cold room
with the aim of farmers adopting it.
It operates with
power generated from a solar panel mounted on the roof, which is stored
with high capacity batteries. This feeds an inverter, which in turn
feeds the refrigeration unit. The capacity of the solar panel depends on
the size of the storage house.
The structure of
what the developers term "eco cold room" has plastic (PET) bottles,
which act as an insulation. This is after constructing the structure
using bricks and cement.
There are two
cavity walls with the PET bottles in between. The bottles as an
insulator help to suck the dry air between the walls once the room is
cold.
The condenser and
evaporator are connected to sockets and the cooling system is connected
to a thermostat, which enables automatic switch off in case the room
attains the required cold temperature.
Nantambi contends that tropical fruits and vegetables require maximum temperatures range from 10 to 13 degrees Celsius.
Whereas a 20 cubic
metre cold room would require Shs25m as total cost, a modest cold room
which uses hydro electric power costs about Shs120m to construct.
Nantambi's design is to make it less costly for the farming community.
Farmers may not
afford such a facility as an individual but they can form associations
and solicit funds for group storage facilities.
"Our innovation is a novel technology coupled with a unique business model of collective marketing approach," she explains.
Given Uganda's
solar potential and the necessity of storage facilities to minimise
transport distances, off-grid solar-powered cold storage is an
opportunity to improve agricultural production and incomes leading to
reduced produce waste and improve food security.
How it is being done
Explaining how the
innovation came about, Hadija Nantambi Ssekyondwa noted that when one
buys fruits and vegetables in markets, the quality is low due to
challenges of storage facility.
"Farmers bring
their vegetables and fail to sell them the same day. They either cover
it with paper boxes or simply leave them open. To curb this challenge, I
thought of developing cold room storage which will not require
electricity from the main grid."
Ms Ssekyondwa and
her colleague Sylvia Namazzi have set up 20 cubic metre cold room in
Bulindo, Kiira Town Council in Wakiso District where they operate Eco
Life Foods. It deals in agricultural produce mainly fruits and
vegetables.
"We are already storing these fruits and vegetables on seasonal basis especially peak times during the rainy season," she says.
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