在资源贫乏地区成功实地部署的战略:饮用水砷修复技术

Q1 Economics, Econometrics and Finance Development Engineering Pub Date : 2019-01-01 DOI:10.1016/j.deveng.2019.100045
Dana Hernandez , Kathryn Boden , Prasenjit Paul , Siva Bandaru , Sreemannarayana Mypati , Abhisek Roy , Susan Amrose , Joyashree Roy , Ashok Gadgil
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引用次数: 22

摘要

科学、技术、金融和政策方面强有力的长期国际伙伴关系对于可持续的实地试验至关重要,从而在社区规模上成功地将新技术商业化。虽然已经存在可以修复地下水中砷的技术,但大多数技术过于昂贵或过于复杂,无法在南亚农村普遍缺乏技术技能的资源贫乏社区持续操作。为了解决这一具体问题,加州大学伯克利分校(UCB)和劳伦斯伯克利国家实验室(LBNL)的研究人员在2006年发明了一种名为电化学砷修复(ECAR)的技术。自2010年以来,UCB和LBNL的研究人员与印度西孟加拉邦贾达夫普尔大学(GCP-JU)的全球变化计划(GCP-JU)合作,与当地一家私营行业集团一起进行社会嵌入,并在2012-2017年期间获得了印美技术论坛(IUSSTF)的财政支持。在中试工厂运行的前10个月(2016年4月至2017年1月),共生产了540立方米(54万升)砷安全水,持续可靠地将砷浓度从最初的252±29降低到最终的2.9±1 ppb (ppb)。本文介绍了将一项技术从美国实验室带到印度进行商业化的关键策略,以解决砷公共卫生危机的技术、社会经济和政治方面的问题,同时实现几个可持续发展目标(sdg)。吸取的经验教训强调了在确定的关键努力区(Critical Effort Zone)期间设计技术、弥合知识鸿沟、支持当地生计和遵守当地法规的重要性,并得到了富有洞察力的资金来源的财政支持,这些资金来源专注于成熟的发明,并将其转化为用于商业规模扩大的新技术。在此过程中,通过重复的直接互动和科学家之间的交流与社区建立信任被证明对于在技术部署的关键阶段弥合技术-社会差距至关重要。这里提供的信息填补了关于成功案例研究的知识空白,在这些案例研究中,砷修复技术获得了社会认可,并随着时间的推移保持了技术性能,同时具有财务可行性。
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Strategies for successful field deployment in a resource-poor region: Arsenic remediation technology for drinking water

Strong long-term international partnership in science, technology, finance and policy is critical for sustainable field experiments leading to successful commercial deployment of novel technology at community-scale. Although technologies already exist that can remediate arsenic in groundwater, most are too expensive or too complicated to operate on a sustained basis in resource-poor communities with the low technical skill common in rural South Asia. To address this specific problem, researchers at University of California-Berkeley (UCB) and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) invented a technology in 2006 called electrochemical arsenic remediation (ECAR). Since 2010, researchers at UCB and LBNL have collaborated with Global Change Program of Jadavpur University (GCP-JU) in West Bengal, India for its social embedding alongside a local private industry group, and with financial support from the Indo-US Technology Forum (IUSSTF) over 2012–2017. During the first 10 months of pilot plant operation (April 2016 to January 2017) a total of 540 m3 (540,000 L) of arsenic-safe water was produced, consistently and reliably reducing arsenic concentrations from initial 252 ± 29 to final 2.9 ± 1 parts per billion (ppb). This paper presents the critical strategies in taking a technology from a lab in the USA to the field in India for commercialization to address the technical, socio-economic, and political aspects of the arsenic public health crisis while targeting several sustainable development goals (SDGs). The lessons learned highlight the significance of designing a technology contextually, bridging the knowledge divide, supporting local livelihoods, and complying with local regulations within a defined Critical Effort Zone period with financial support from an insightful funding source focused on maturing inventions and turning them into novel technologies for commercial scale-up. Along the way, building trust with the community through repetitive direct interactions, and communication by the scientists, proved vital for bridging the technology-society gap at a critical stage of technology deployment. The information presented here fills a knowledge gap regarding successful case studies in which the arsenic remediation technology obtains social acceptance and sustains technical performance over time, while operating with financial viability.

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来源期刊
Development Engineering
Development Engineering Economics, Econometrics and Finance-Economics, Econometrics and Finance (all)
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
11
审稿时长
31 weeks
期刊介绍: Development Engineering: The Journal of Engineering in Economic Development (Dev Eng) is an open access, interdisciplinary journal applying engineering and economic research to the problems of poverty. Published studies must present novel research motivated by a specific global development problem. The journal serves as a bridge between engineers, economists, and other scientists involved in research on human, social, and economic development. Specific topics include: • Engineering research in response to unique constraints imposed by poverty. • Assessment of pro-poor technology solutions, including field performance, consumer adoption, and end-user impacts. • Novel technologies or tools for measuring behavioral, economic, and social outcomes in low-resource settings. • Hypothesis-generating research that explores technology markets and the role of innovation in economic development. • Lessons from the field, especially null results from field trials and technical failure analyses. • Rigorous analysis of existing development "solutions" through an engineering or economic lens. Although the journal focuses on quantitative, scientific approaches, it is intended to be suitable for a wider audience of development practitioners and policy makers, with evidence that can be used to improve decision-making. It also will be useful for engineering and applied economics faculty who conduct research or teach in "technology for development."
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