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In India, a Cycle Rickshaw With Help From the Sun

10 May 2009

Correction attached

This the VOA Special English Development Report.

Picture a bicycle with a two-wheeled carriage in place of a back tire. India has millions of these cycle rickshaws. The operators are called pullers. They ride through the streets pulling passengers and goods. Unlike auto rickshaws, which burn fuel, cycle rickshaws produce no pollution. But the job of a rickshaw puller is not easy.

The Soleckshaw was launched in Delhi last year
Soleckshaw
Now, to help ease their labor, there is the Solar-Electric Rickshaw, or Soleckshaw. This is the product of work of several scientific, industrial and environmental agencies.

An electric motor helps the operator pull a heavy load or go up a hill. A thirty-six volt battery can carry the rickshaw forty kilometers. Top speed is fifteen kilometers an hour, and the Soleckshaw does not pollute. The project includes a battery charging station at a Delhi Metro Rail Station.

Testing of the Soleckshaw was launched in Delhi in October. The nonprofit Center for Rural Development is supervising the project.

The goal with the new rickshaw is to increase the number of trips per day that the pullers can make. There is also space for advertising, a way for them to earn additional money.

The designers suggest that rickshaw pullers could repay a loan to buy a Soleckshaw within about two or three years. They could borrow the money from the Rickshaw Bank.

India's seven to eight million pullers usually pay one-third of their earnings to the owner of a rickshaw to use it by the day. But in two thousand four the Center for Rural Development had the idea for a bank to help self-employed workers buy their own rickshaws.

There are plans for improved versions of the Soleckshaw, and to use them when New Delhi hosts the Commonwealth Games next year.

Vandana Prakash writes about environmental policy. She wrote at ecowordly.com that Soleckshaws are a great step forward. But she says several important issues and questions are getting lost in all the excitement.

She suggests that pullers might not be able to earn enough to pay back a loan for the current high cost of a Soleckshaw. The price is four hundred forty dollars compared to one hundred seventy, or less, for a traditional cycle rickshaw.

And how, she asks, will they handle additional costs such as electric charging, batteries and solar panels? Vandana Prakash says the dream of creating "proud owners" needs greater planning and market research.

And that's the VOA Special English Development Report. It was written by Jerilyn Watson. 

___

Correction: A Web site was listed incorrectly in this report. The site is ecoworldly.com, not ecowordly.com.



Comments:

1. ^^

A rickshaw puller looks like he needs much energy to take passengers to somewhere they want to go. However, it causes less pollution than any other vehicle does in the world. Sounds good to hear that a better- equipped, less pollutive, cutting-edage vehicle using the solar heat will run on the road very soon. At the same time, that's too bad for the current rickshaw pullers. I also hear that a developed car using less fuel will be produced very soon. I can not believe that the world I saw in cartoons or movies will appear soon. ^^
Submitted by: Lee YunHee (S.Korea)
06-01-2009 - 05:48:52

2. Ideal yet impossible

Cycle rickshaws are still in use in much of Asia, including Vietnam where the pusher (instead of the puller) work hard to earn enough money for his life. Though solar-electric rickshaws are excellent, such additional costs as maintanance and battery charging make it impossible for low-income people to own one. Personally I would prefer traditional cycle rickshaws to be part of a country's culture. It would be nice if one visited Ben Thanh Market (HCMC) and Hue Ancient Town on o cycle rickshaw tour around the cities.
Submitted by: Ton That Hoa (Vietnam)
05-15-2009 - 04:28:04

3. Soleckshaw

The report touched the heart.The soleckshaw is not only environment friendly but it is poor friendly too. Thanks for a good report.
Submitted by: prem verma (India)
05-15-2009 - 03:00:33

4.

good!!! India I love this country so much,India is important for every thing especialy ,nature, culture, tolerance ,and Science offcorse
Submitted by: hossien (kurdistan)
05-14-2009 - 21:02:31

5. traditional vs modern

Thanks for this a good article, Human being always looks for modern equipments and vehicles versus traditional them. if it is possible, please explain more about this new vehicle.
Submitted by: T.M (Malaysia)
05-14-2009 - 08:31:57

6. Good example for the whole world.

Why not use rickshaws throughout the world? Pollution is not only a problem of India,is it? Most people can commute to work by it if they work nearer ten kilometers from home. Rickshows are good substitute for cars. What a person carrries in his car usually? I guess something that is not hevier than twenty kilos. Engineers now quite capable to build a tricycle for two or three riders and spacy baggage unit. And being powered by solar batteries and having nice modern design this vehicle is right almost for everybody! Besides we all talk about lack of exercises in the life of modern people and health problems it causes. Thus we can solve many problems at once. People will become helthier, air pollution in cities will decrease and simultaniously traffic jams will disapiar, parking will be much esier. To me, this rickshaws are future! And one more, what an exellent way to travel on vacation!
Submitted by: Peter Mikhailov (Russia)
05-14-2009 - 02:01:04

7. Uesful

This paragraph is really usefu for learning English. I started to learn few months ago. Thank you. I think, Solar-Electric Rickshaw idae is very good to reduce pollutions and to earn money. Govvernment must be support such a good ideas.
Submitted by: Sulbha (India)
05-12-2009 - 10:28:41

8. Realistic Idea!!!

Soleckshaw is an interesting idea. With the traditional rickshaw, passengers sitting in rear (in India) or front (in some other countries like Viet Nam) side of the rickshaw often feel embarrassed when the riders get tired to ride them. Now with that idea, passengers can enjoy the landscapes comfortably. However, the new kind of rickshaw sounds costly with the electric charging, batteries and solar panels. Most of the riders or pullers of rickshaw are often very poor so it is hard for them to afford the expensive price. I think the inventors should create a kind of soleckshaw with new technology but cheap price. At that time, the riders would have a good means to earn money. In my city, rickshaw is a type of transportation foreigners often use to make sightseeing around the city. If that new invention could apply in my country, it would help the labor riders lessen the tiredness on their way of earning for their living.
Submitted by: Autumn leaf (Viet Nam)
05-12-2009 - 05:23:49

9. the solar-electric rickshaw

the solar-electric rickshaw is the good innovation for reducing the emission of gaz co2 that causes damage to the ozone layer. But the principal obstacle is the high price for to own this one.the gouvernemnt should make more efforts to make low the price by the subventions of make long the period of the repay of the loan.
Submitted by: achouri boualem (algeria)
05-11-2009 - 20:48:36

10. pedicab same as soleckshaw

the environment are polluted so we need much more policies environmental. the Soleckshaw are method help environment more better.i like the soleckshaw .in my country -vietnam have vehicle same as the soleckshaw it is called pedicab. everyone who have been visited vietnam known its. but it not have battery.I saw the puller carry passenger and goods very hard.i will become engineering i wish that i can invent the vehicle likely the soleckshaw.
Submitted by: Phạm Văn Hiếu (vietnam)
05-11-2009 - 09:54:54

11.

That's good idea to avoid the pollution and spending alot of money .
Submitted by: snad ()
05-11-2009 - 09:11:13

12. Take off

The invention of the solar-tricycle is really a revolutionary feat. However, the utilization of high-tech in the manual labor field is still in its infancy in developing countries. For India, the government has a long way to go before they can balance the fiscal problem and environmental protection.
Submitted by: China (China)
05-11-2009 - 01:38:27

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