Another update (not recent) on the misconceived "Life Straw" :

<http://www.ssireview.org/blog/entry/thirty_million_dollars_a_little_bit_of_carbon_and_a_lot_of_hot_air>

Verstergaard Frandsen, maker of fine mosquito nets and the
mostly useless LifeStraw Personal, has announced plans to
give away a million of their LifeStraw Family water filters
to households in western Kenya. CEO Mikkel Vestergaard
Frandsen will invest $30 million of his own money in the
project—known as Carbon for Water—but according to Fast
Company, “he’s not worried about losing out—because for each
LifeStraw he donates, he’s going to be making money.”

How’s that work? Through the magic of carbon credits, of
course! Back to Fast Company: “Kenyans boil their water to
eliminate waterborne diseases, using wood fires. Those fires
generate a large amount of carbon, and eliminating the need
to boil water means fewer emissions from Kenya. Because
they’re providing the means to reduce emissions, Vestergaard
Frandsen earns carbon credits for each LifeStraw donated. He
will then turn around and sell those credits to companies in
countries that have carbon caps and exchanges.” And these
ain’t plain ol’ vanilla carbon credits, either: “Because the
project is based in Kenya and has significant humanitarian
and health co-benefits, these credits can be sold for a
premium.”


This scheme is so wrong on so many levels that I don’t know
whether to laugh or cry.

First, this is a bogus application of carbon credits:
People in western Kenya, by and large, don’t boil their
water. I’ve made numerous trips there and have talked to any
number of far more qualified people working in the region.
One of those is Jeff Albert at Aquaya, who says, “Boiling
prevalence is likely very low throughout Africa, but we have
some actual data from western Kenya in particular. What we
found was that out of 400 randomly selected households in
the study, only about a quarter of the respondents reported
boiling their drinking water with any frequency, and I
suspect that even that number was inflated by courtesy bias
(the natural tendency to tell the visitor what you think
would make them happy).”  The notion that you’re going to
prevent lots of carbon going into the atmosphere by
distributing water filters is ridiculous, and anyone
involved in this charade should be ashamed of
themselves—especially the Gold Standard Foundation, which
certified it.


Second, there is little evidence that LifeStraw Family
water filters reduce diarrheal disease under real-world
community conditions. There is exactly one rigorous study
looking at health impacts. Tom Clasen, an excellent
researcher, and his team, did a 12-month randomized trial in
the Congo where they gave filters to 240 households: They
did not find a statistically significant reduction in
diarrheal illness. Moreover, at 12 months, 24 percent of
households didn’t use them at all, and only 56 percent
understood how to use them properly (it’s not that simple).
That’s just one study, of course, and perhaps subsequent
trials will paint a rosier picture, but it certainly doesn’t
justify the distribution of a million of these things.


Third, the LifeStraw Family water filter is just too damn
expensive, and it has to be replaced every three years.
There are only two ways that a product like this can get to
real scale: the market or free government distribution. The
wholesale cost of the device from VF is about $25; the real
cost to a customer, if you include distribution and
marketing, would be more like $50 to $70. Put another way,
you’d be asking a smallholder farmer to spend a quarter of
her annual income on a water filter. That’s not going to
happen, nor will governments pass out a device this
expensive. Even if the LifeStraw Family did achieve the
claimed carbon and health impacts, you’d have to repeat a
$30 million give-way every three years.


Projects like Carbon for Water make a mockery of the effort
to prevent carbon emissions, and as a physician, it’s
especially depressing to see a loopy funding scheme paired
with a lousy public health solution. The social sector has
got to escape this pattern of bogus idea, hyperventilating
media, and eventual, invisible failure. This idea should
have been dead on arrival, and I hope that Mr. Vestergaard
Frandsen gets to experience the joy of a $30 million
donation rather than a profit on his investment. I wish that
his company would stick to the manufacture and distribution
of their excellent and affordable mosquito nets.


On Tue, Nov 8, 2011 at 10:39 AM, Eugen Leitl <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 08, 2011 at 12:00:27PM +0530, Udhay Shankar N wrote:
>
>> Another interesting new development:
>>
>> http://www.theverge.com/2011/11/2/2533589/philips-instanttrust-instant-water-purification
>

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