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Xela Teco plugs rural villagers into renewable energy (Good for Business) |
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When one isolated village in Guatemala decided to wire itself for
electricity for the very first time, they decided to step out of the
past and go straight to the future with renewable energy. They were
able to do it with the help of Xela Teco and the Appropriate
Infrastructure Development Group. Xela Teco installs and repairs
sustainable power generators in rural Guatemalan communities that
otherwise couldn't afford electricity. The company specializes in
hydroelectric systems and biodigesters that turn animal waste into
methane gas to fuel stoves. Many Guatemalan villages are too small to
build power plants and too remote to establish transmission lines.
That's where Xela Teco comes in. With support from the U.S.-based AIDG,
Xela Teco uses local expertise to service the technologies that can
deliver water, electricity and heat without harming the environment. In
one village near El Palmar, Xela Teco recently installed a solar water
heater and a complete micro-hydroelectric system. Forty families there
can now enjoy electricity in their homes for the very first time.
Amazing considering some villagers make as little as $2 a day. They are
showing the rest of us that you don't have to have the green to go
green on energy.
Original article can be found clicking here.
G4B's Monthly CSReport ~ Issue Twenty-Nine
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