Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumIn Africa, big plans for bamboo bikes (BBC)
Ken Wysocky
As improbable as it may seem, a product that debuted 120 years ago, then quickly disappeared the bamboo bicycle is now re-emerging as a potential catalyst for economic growth in Ghana and other impoverished sub-Saharan countries.
The first bamboo bike was a minor sensation when the Bamboo Cycle Company introduced it in London in 1894. The bikes won praise from none other than Lord Edward Spencer-Churchill a distant relative of Winston Churchill who was one of a handful of aristocrats who received one as part of a publicity stunt.
But in terms of market traction, the novel, rustic-looking velocipedes never got rolling. Some might see that as a cautionary tale for promoters who see bamboo bikes (and a host of other products made from bamboo) as economic saviours in under-developed countries. But bamboo believers like Kwabena Danso remain undaunted.
Bamboo bikes are starting to get a lot of attention on the international scene, notes Danso, the chief executive officer of Booomers International, a two-year-old, bamboo-bike-building subsidiary of the Yonso Project, a grassroots community-development organisation in Ghana. Trend-spotting note: Last November, United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon gave A-list exposure to a bike made by the Ghana Bamboo Bikes Initiative when he took it for a ride at the Warsaw Climate Change Conference. And several years ago, the Philippines presented US President Barack Obama with a bamboo bicycle made by the Manila-based Bambike Company.
Danso also points out that the United Nations Environment Programme estimates that by 2020, the sustainable-transportation market will reach $197bn. We think bamboo bicycles will take a large percentage of this about 40%, he says. They will take centre stage in the coming years.
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more: http://www.bbc.com/autos/story/20140919-africas-grassroots-game-changer
underpants
(182,803 posts)Re posted to FB
madokie
(51,076 posts)I love it so do everyone who sees it. The last I put down was carbonized stranded bamboo and its awesome. It is some tough shit, about 1 out of 4 or 5 staples just wadded up when I was stapling it down. in fact removing those staples was what took the longest time in the whole span of installing it. I used the staple gun that they recommended to use for installing it too. It drives the stapples in the top of the tongue at about a 45 degree angle back under the boards. awesome set up.