Alternative Energy

Solar Lights | Solar Cookers Greenhouses | New Developments and Future Plans | Annual Reports


Fuel sources are extremely scarce in high-altitude pastoral communities. Every day, people spend hours laboring to collect what little fuel there is in these harsh climes: thorny shrubs and animal dung. Burning these fuels in open hearths causes chronic eye, respiratory, and throat infections, particularly among women and children. Furthermore, fuel collection has repercussions on the entire ecosystem through increased erosion and less browse for livestock. From reading religious texts to cooking and spinning wool, daily tasks critical to survival in the Himalaya are accomplished by the weak light of candles. Many of the villages in which DROKPA works have no source of electricity.


 

Typical stove and kitchen of the high-Himalayan regions of Dolpo and Mustang (C)Ken Bauer
Typical stove and kitchen of the high-Himalayan regions
of Dolpo and Mustang
© Ken Bauer

A Dolpo family enjoys their first solar powered light.(C)Ken Bauer
A Dolpo family enjoys their first solar powered light.
© Ken Bauer
 


DROKPA is partnering with local communities to introduce and encourage the use of solar lights, solar cookers, and greenhouses. In the regions where DROKPA works, the sun shines more than 200 days annually and solar lights can brighten lives in myriad ways. Solar lights are great solutions to energy needs at community institutions such as this, and local schools.


 

In 2003-04 DROKPA funded solar lights and solar dryers for the Amchi Clinic in Do Tarap. (C)Ken Bauer
In 2003-04 DROKPA funded solar lights and solar dryers
for the Amchi Clinic in Do Tarap. © Ken Bauer

The inside of the Do Tarap Amchi Clinic (C)Ken Bauer
The inside of the Do Tarap Amchi Clinic.
© Ken Bauer
 

Solar Lights
Solar lights are a positive, affordable solution to energy needs in remote pastoral communities. Photovoltaic lights are a tested and trusted technology in Himalaya and across the Tibetan Plateau and are a top local priority. Since 2001, households owning solar lights has increased from 20 to 150 in the Panzang Valley of Dolpo alone
!

 

 
A villager in Dolpo checks to see if his water has boiled (C)Ken Bauer
A villager in Dolpo checks to see if his water has boiled.
© Ken Bauer
Detail of a solar cooker being used to make tea (C)Ken Bauer
Detail of a solar cooker being used to make tea.
© Ken Bauer
 


Solar Cookers

Solar cookers reduce exposure to smoke thereby reducing respiratory and eye diseases. Parabolic reflectors provide clean, efficient, and renewable energy sources that make a huge difference in locals' quality of life.

 

 
DROKPA is now supporting community greenhouses in Dolpo (C)Ken Bauer
DROKPA is now supporting community greenhouses in
Dolpo. © Ken Bauer
Detail of tomatoes growing in Tinkyu village, Panzang Valley, at 14,000 feet! (C)Ken Bauer
Detail of tomatoes growing in Tinkyu village, Panzang
Valley, at 14,000 feet!
© Ken Bauer
 

Greenhouses
The Dolpo Alternative Energy Project has taken on an exciting new dimension: greenhouses. In 2004, we helped build a greenhouse in Panzang Valley and, in 2005, partnered with local villagers to build another school greenhouse, this time in Do Tarap Valley. Greenhouses enable local communities to lengthen short growing seasons by germinating seedlings early, produce vitamin-rich vegetables, and demonstrate the potential of household kitchen gardens. Greenhouses bring nutritional benefits by making possible the cultivation of previously unavailable vegetables like carrots, squash, pumpkins, tomatoes, and more!

Your support of DROKPA's alternative energy program will brighten the homes and improve the health of these ancient and vibrant communities, while reversing environmental degradation in some of earth's most forbidding and majestic environments.

New Developments and Future Plans

DROKPA is now working with local villagers, regional governments, and other international organizations to provide solar light systems, solar cookers, greenhouses, and solar dryers for medicinal plants. DROKPA is also working with community members to explore other avenues for alternative energy solutions, such as mini-hydro stations, solar powered water pumps, and solar water heaters. DROKPA will continue to collaborate with local villagers, regional governments, and other international organizations to provide renewable, alternative energy technologies and training to schools, community temples, and other village-level organizations in remote pastoral communities. 

We are also working with local communities and Nepali alternative energy companies to help maintain and protect pastoral lifeways. Before the Chinese assumed control of Tibet and closed the Nepal/China border, pastoral communities throughout the Himalaya interacted freely with nomads in Tibet. Pastoralists throughout the northern Nepal/Tibet border were dependent on Tibet's winter grasslands to sustain their herds of yak, sheep and goat, and horses. However, the border closing cut off critical supplies of winter fodder, creating a short-term emergency in which thousands of livestock starved, and a long-term shortage of winter range

.Tinkyu Village, Dolpo ©Ken Bauer
Tinkyu Village, Dolpo
© Ken Bauer

Today, DROKPA and its local, national, and international collaborators are working to reverse this critical shortfall. In the coming months, we hope to introduce solar-powered water pumps, which have great potential to increase food and fodder supplies by irrigating agricultural crops, providing drinking water, and growing desperately needed winter hay. These water pumps also have the capability of helping to establish vegetable gardens, greenhouses, and cultivated herbal nurseries, which will help to improve community health and conserve the natural resources of these high, dry, trans-Himalayan ecosystems.

Together, this coalition of partners can decrease the incidence of disease, arrest environmental impacts from fuel collection, reduce time spent in hard physical labor, and improve the quality of life in places like Dolpo. But we need your help!

For a more complete description of DROKPA's alternative energy projects, please click on our Annual Reports below

2001 Report
2002 Report
2003 Report
2004 Report
2005 Report