Bamboo Bike Project

The Bamboo Bike Project was started by two scientists at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory (LDEO), David Ho and John Mutter, with initial funding coming from The Earth Institute at Columbia University. The project's goal is to help local investors start factories that make low cost, high quality, locally produced bamboo bikes to be widely distributed in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Bamboo Bike Project
IndustryNon-profit
Founded2007
FounderDavid Ho, John Mutter
HeadquartersPalisades, NY
ProductsBamboo Bicycles
Websitehttp://www.bamboobike.org

History

In 2006, David Ho, now a Professor of Oceanography at University of Hawaii at Manoa,[1] won $25,000 in a seed funding competition from the Earth Clinic[1][2] to determine the feasibility of using bamboo bicycles to provide improved transportation in sub-Saharan Africa. In the summer of 2007, Ho and his colleague John Mutter, using the seed money from the Earth Clinic, paid for Craig Calfee to join them on a trip to Accra, Ghana to determine the feasibility of building bamboo bikes using locally sourced material.[3]

After a successful trip, the Bamboo Bike Project teamed up with the Millennium Cities Initiative in 2008 to help establish bamboo bike building factories in Kumasi and elsewhere.[4]

Ghana production facility

In January 2011, the Bamboo Bike Project (BBP) held a two-week training program designed to teach local workers in Kumasi how to build bamboo bicycles. It is the project's first large-scale bamboo bike production facility in the world. This facility is controlled by Bamboo Bikes Limited (BBM), a Ghana-based company owned by investor Kwame Sarpong. The training program was used to begin the production of 750 bamboo bicycles which were to be distributed to NGOs located throughout Ghana.

The production of these bicycles was to provide the managing company BBM an opportunity to evaluate the facility's capacity for large-scale production and provide adequate experience for the workers to begin large-scale production. With the completion of the training program and the production of these first 750 bicycles, the plant became the first facility capable of mass-producing bamboo bicycles in the world. It is projected that this facility will be capable of producing up to 20,000 bamboo bicycles a year.

Manufacturing at this scale will provide employment, keep costs low, and make available cost-effective transport to the local people.[5]

gollark: More "potentially interesting things to do" than "challenge" but:- play some fun computer games- learn programming- read books (there are lots of authors providing books for free because of the whole situation, I find lots through reddit, and amazon's kindle unlimited is fairly cheap and has lots)- do... exercise of some sort... if you like that, I guess- learn about some other subject which interests you, there are loads of resources for stuff on the internet these days- drawing/other art stuff might be interesting for you if you're good at that- write things? There's r/writingprompts on reddit for that sort of thing- learning lockpicking is apparently quite cheap, might be fun, and is somewhat useful (and legal as long as you only do it on stuff you own, probably)
gollark: <@139559766744629248>
gollark: If you still just want "potentially interesting things to do" I can probably come up with some stuff.
gollark: What *sort* of challenge?
gollark: Have each person provide a few sentences or paragraphs.

See also

Notes

  1. Conversation: David Ho, Environmental Scientist with a New Spin on Bikes Archived July 7, 2010, at the Wayback Machine. Cogito (December 18, 2008). Retrieved on November 11, 2011.
  2. Seed Funding Competition Year 2006 – 2007 – The Earth Institute – Columbia University. Earthinstitute.columbia.edu. Retrieved on November 11, 2011.
  3. Bamboo Bike Project. Bamboobike.org (June 16, 2007). Retrieved on November 11, 2011.
  4. Millennium Cities Initiative – Bamboo Bike Project. Mci.ei.columbia.edu (January 24, 2011). Retrieved on November 11, 2011.
  5. "Production Starts on Sustainable Bamboo Bikes in Ghana". Earth Institute, Columbia University. Retrieved November 11, 2011.
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