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The results documented point very favourably towards the large positive potential that the VitaGoat has in enhancing food and income security in Africa. When Africare (click Field Work for more information) was asked to select pilot sites for the first three VitaGoats, the first country to be selected was Guinea. The selected location in Guinea is in Dinguiraye, about 500 km northeast of the capital, Conakry. There are about 30,000 people in the Community, and Africare has been working there for several years. A women’s group already involved in food production and sales and linked to Africare was chosen as the trainees and eventual users of this first system. Dinguiraye has all the elements of a good VitaGoat location: no electricity, sporadic water availability and remoteness from major markets. A site had been prepared according to a three-page checklist sent
to
Africare, with the main feature being the right size of building to
house
and operate the system in (click VitaGoat Site Requirements for more
details).
An variety of different foods was processed with the system
including:
Sufficient quantities of each product were processed to determine the output per hour and to adjust the cycle grinder to the correct speed. These results indicated that the production ranges detailed in the VitaGoat fact sheet and brochure are indeed correct, even taking into account the fact that the women who operated the cycle-grinder had no previous experience (for example in even pedaling a bicycle before). All components performed as expected with the most recent technical innovation added to the cycle-grinder – a flywheel – in fact being indispensable for the production of hard products (such as peanuts). The boiler also performed exceptionally well, using very little fuel (wood) to produce the soymilk and emitting little heat to its surroundings, thus increasing its efficiency. The products deemed to have the most economic potential (and happily, with a potentially large impact on nutritional status of consumers) were the soyfoods (soymilk, tofu and sour soymilk), the sterilized fruit purees (mango, papaya, etc) and shea nut butter. The production of other foods such as peanuts for butter, ground soybeans for soya “coffee” and grains and cereals into flour was rendered much less strenuous than with traditional manual methods, but further study needs to be done to determine their economic viability. The soya “dairy” cost analysis was quite revealing, showing that soymilk products could be sold for about a half to a third the price of equivalent dairy products (when they are available), and still provide a healthy profit (50-75%) for the group. In the end, the women’s group, Africare staff, government representatives and other surrounding area women’s groups representatives now all firmly believe that the VitaGoat can easily be used from the moment it is “out of the box” to create value-added products made from locally available commodities that can sell well. This pilot training also made it obvious that it could be very successful and sustainable in Africa and in other developing regions. Future innovations to the system may include adapting a battery –charging system to the flywheel on the cycle-grinder in order to provide lighting for nighttime production or other activities (like allowing children to do homework, etc) and to finding other uses for the steam boiler (food and industrial applications have already been discussed). Here is a brief illustrated montage of the VitaGoat experience in
Guinea: |
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