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Archive for March, 2010

A Clean, Quiet and Green Machine

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

Thanks to the generous donation of the prototype Feltenberger Pendulum Pump to the One5 Foundation, our volunteers in Haiti will be able to provide the people we serve with clean drinking water day-in and day-out.

Last week, Art Drentlau, senior vice president of Gravitational Energy Corp. of Akron, Ohio, the pump’s manufacturer, was in town to demonstrate how the pump works.  He set up the pump at Leawood City Park and showed how the simple movement of a crank and piston could pull water from a pond and filter 1,000 gallons of safe drinking water every hour.

That’s very important because nearly one billion people in the world don’t have access to clean water. The United Nations established March 22 as World Water Day in order to focus attention on the world’s water crisis, as well as solutions to address it.

Now the One5 Foundation will be able to bring clean water to earthquake-ravaged Haiti with the help of the Feltenberger Pendulum Pump.  The manually operated pump uses a weighted pendulum to help keep the pumping action going, thus minimizing operator fatigue. It is perfect for use in areas where fuel for motorized pumps is unavailable.

We are extremely grateful to Gravitational Energy for the donation because it also acknowledges the expertise that the One5 Foundation has exhibited during Haiti’s crisis. The pump will be shipped to Haiti by the end of this month. We intend to use the pump at a hospital in Port-au-Prince where we are continuing to provide medical relief.

We encourage other NGOs and charitable groups to sponsor more of these pumps in other areas of the developing world as well as Haiti. It is a clean, quiet and green machine.

Communities cannot pull themselves out of the mire of poverty unless their residents are healthy. Clean drinking water is basic to that.

One5 Will Help Demonstrate Innovative Pump To Purify Water in Remote Areas

Monday, March 15th, 2010

Many of the deadly diseases that afflict children in the developing world can be traced to unsafe water supplies.  Millions of people around the world do not have access to clean water day in and day out. When a catastrophe on the scale of the recent earthquake in Haiti comes along, thousands more are suddenly thrust into an environment where the water sources can be deadly.

As you know, the One5 Foundation has been working with orphans in Haiti for some time and was able to make a real difference for thousands of people after the earthquake struck in January. Because of our experience in Haiti, the One5 Foundation has been selected to demonstrate an innovative water pump that could help provide communities around the world with safe sources of water.

The hand-operated Feltenberger Pendulum Pump is manufactured by Gravitational Energy Corp. of Akron, Ohio. Representatives of the company and One5 Foundation will make public demonstrations at 7:30 and 11:30  a.m., Thursday, March 18 at Leawood City Park, Shelter C, 10601 Lee Blvd.

The device uses gravity (via a pendulum) to help the operator work, making it much less tiring than traditional lever-arm pumps.  It is designed for use in areas where there’s no access to fuel to operate motorized pumps.

Built into the machine is an Aquashield water filtration system that can produce more than 1,000 gallons per hour of clean drinking water, which meets or exceeds the World Health Organization standards.  Virtually any type of contaminated water source can be filtered to these standards.  It can also be set to produce 400-500 gallons per hour of hospital-grade pure water. Larger scale versions of the pump are under development.

This particular pump, the first one manufactured, is on its way to Haiti where it will be put into action by the end of this month, donated by Gravitational Energy.

The Feltenberger Pendulum Pump is the sort of invention that is desperately needed in Haiti and other developing countries. It allows people in specific communities the means to improve their lives dramatically, giving them a foundation of basic health. We hope that other charitable organizations will take notice and sponsor pumps in communities where there is a need.