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Citizen Engineers in Action

“We package engineers as problem solvers rather than creators and innovators who address the grand challenges of our time—environmental contamination,

world hunger, energy dependence, and the spread of disease . . . How did we let this happen?”

—Jacquelyn F. Sullivan,1 co-director of the Integrated Teaching and Learning Program at the University of Colorado at Boulder

Around the world, Citizen Engineers are making a real difference inimproving the quality of life. Some are working in the companies youpass by every day, making a difference in the products that we use in our daily routines. Others are applying their passion and expertise to solving fundamental problems that people face. As a conclusion to this book we thought we’d highlight a few inspiring examples of the kinds of things real- world Citizen Engineers are working on today.

Engineers Without Borders (EWB), a nonprofit humanitarian organization, is partnering with developing communities worldwide in order to improve their quality of life. This partnership focuses on the implementation of sus- tainable engineering projects, while involving and training internationally responsible engineers and engineering students. Here are just a few of their recent projects.

• In Bulandshahar, Uttar Pradesh, the student-teacher duo of Niruttam Kumar Singh and Harvansh Yadav have made a cow dung battery that lights up electric bulbs, charges mobile phones, and brings alive radios.2

• Undergraduate engineering students are currently building a bridge across a gorge in a small town in Nicaragua. The students have sur- veyed the entire project site and are now in the process of designing a bridge to span the gorge and allow for pedestrian travel during the rainy season.3

• Thousands of residents of rural villages in India are receiving quality eye care thanks to a collaborative effort between an Indian hospital

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network and the researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, and at Intel Corporation who have developed a new technology for low-cost rural connectivity.4

• Engineers at PlayPumps International designed the PlayPump5 water system, which provides easy access to clean drinking water, brings joy to children, and leads to improvements in health, education, gender equality, and economic development. Installed near schools, the PlayPump system doubles as a water pump and a merry-go-round. It also provides a way to reach rural and peri-urban communities with potentially life-saving public health messages.

In Panama, students and researchers are using small wireless sensors to help answer big environmental questions. Warren Wilson College and CREA, a nonprofit organization in Panama, are implementing a geographic informa- tion system (GIS) and wireless sensor network on the 1,000-acre Cocobolo Nature Reserve in Panama. Tiny Sun SPOT sensors6 will provide an inexpen- sive, easy-to-program platform for monitoring all kinds of things: the impact of deforestation on an ecosystem, plant and insect activity in a rainforest canopy that’s 60 feet off the ground, or small changes in local atmospheric conditions that reveal broader meteorological patterns. “This network will allow students to ask big questions and get meaningful answers,” says Warren Wilson College Geography Professor David Abernathy, who is over- seeing the implementation of the sensor network. “We’re extremely excited about the possibilities for our research.”

At Rice University, graduate students are using nanotechnology and biotechnology to create high-performance and cost-effective water treatment systems and create the information needed to ensure that emerging technolo- gies evolve in an environmentally responsible and sustainable manner.

Engineers at Tesla Motors will have a profound impact on the environ- ment—whether or not their start-up company succeeds in the marketplace. By proving that a high-performance electric car with zero exhaust is now tech- nologically feasible, Tesla engineers have already radically altered consumer attitudes about electric vehicles and accelerated industry-wide development of new energy-efficient technologies.

Engineers at Global Research Technologies (GRT), a technology research and development company, and Klaus Lackner from Columbia University have demonstrated a new technology that captures carbon from the air. In the “air extraction” prototype, sorbents capture carbon dioxide molecules from free-flowing air and release those molecules as a pure stream of carbon diox- ide for sequestration.

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This new technique has met a wide range of performance standards in the GRT research facility. “This is an exciting step toward making carbon capture and sequestration a viable technology,” said Lackner in an interview with The Earth Institute at Columbia University. “I have long believed science and industry have the technological capability to design systems that will capture greenhouse gases and allow us to transition to energies of the future over the long term.”7

And you don’t have to be an international conglomerate to practice the lifecycle approach to engineering. As showcased in an issue of Newsweek magazine, a small-scale project in Brazil shows how collaborative engineer- ing can create an environmentally responsible business that also benefits the environment.8 José Roberto Fonseca, an engineer and environmentalist, found an opportunity for farmers to grow their way out of poverty. He devised a scheme for using solar power in a desolate, semidesert area of Brazil to irrigate suspended gardens of red, orange, and yellow hot peppers, which could then be chopped, bottled, and exported as gourmet vinaigrette.

Fonseca’s solution was based on hydroponics. The pepper plants are grown in water laced with nutrients on a wooden trellis crisscrossed with ultrathin irrigation tubes. At first, his team drew well water and filtered away the salt using a solar-powered desalinator. Now the community taps a natural spring and lets gravity bring the water to the plants. A bank of photovoltaic (PVC) panels powers pumps that keep the water flowing. A “daisy chain” of inven- tors and entrepreneurs are involved in the production process. An agronomist and an engineer designed the hydroponic gardens; a nutritionist taught vil- lagers the secrets of making spices and condiments; an economist worked up a business plan; and Fonseca built a distribution network with start-up money from international benefactors. “He thought it through, from the soil down to the dinner table,” says John Ryan, head of the Virginia-based Institute for Environmental Development.

Today 11 family businesses in Baixas are making a good part of their income from the peppers, and economic prosperity has come to one of the poorest places on Earth—without harming the environment.

In another example, a partnership between Audi and UC Riverside (along with UC Berkeley) has resulted in a project called “Clean Air, a Viable Planet,” announced in fall 2007 at the Los Angeles Auto Show. The goal of this proj- ect is to reduce CO2 emissions by allowing drivers to determine the greenest route possible in current traffic conditions. The theory is that any vehicle, regardless of its fuel economy rating, will use less fuel getting from point A to point B if it can cruise at a constant speed rather than if it is constantly speeding up, slowing down, and idling in traffic. “Our goal is to be part of a real solution to the constant dilemma commuters face: What is the best way

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to get there?” said Matt Barth, professor of electrical engineering and direc- tor of the College of Engineering Center for Environmental Research and Technology (CE-CERT), in an interview published on the UC Riverside Newsroom Web site.9 “Sometimes the best way to get there is the one that causes the least damage to the planet.”

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  • Contents
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgments
  • About the Authors
  • Introduction: While You Were Busy Debugging…
  • Part I: Advent of the Citizen Engineer
    • Chapter 1 “Citizen Engineer” Defined
      • Responsibilities of the Citizen Engineer
      • Knowledge Base of the Citizen Engineer
    • Chapter 2 How Engineering Got Its Paradigm Shifted
      • Changes in the Nature of Engineering
      • Engineering on a Whole New Scale
      • Externally Driven Changes in Engineering
      • Perspectives on an Engineering Transformation
      • Part I: Summary, and What’s Next
  • Part II: Environmental Responsibility
    • Chapter 3 Environmental Impact: The Big Picture
      • Eco-Responsible Engineering: An Enormous Opportunity
      • Core Challenges of Eco-Engineering
    • Chapter 4 Beyond the Black Cloud: Looking at Lifecycles
      • The “Cradle to Cradle” Vision
    • Chapter 5 A Pragmatic Approach to Lifecycle Analysis
      • A Basic Lifecycle Model
      • Additional Lifecycle Considerations
      • Embodied Energy and Embodied Carbon
      • Starting a Top-Level Assessment
    • Chapter 6 Setting Priorities, Requirements, and Goals
      • Knowing the Law
      • Business Requirements and Opportunities
      • Areas of Greatest Impact
      • Quick Wins and Low-Hanging Fruit
    • Chapter 7 Energy and Emissions
      • Common Sources of Energy
      • Calculating Energy and Power
      • Energy Impacts: Finding the Cleanest Source of Power
      • Energy and GHG Emissions
      • Putting a Value on Carbon (Dioxide!)
      • Heat, Noise, Light, and Radio Emissions
      • Process-Related GHG Emissions
      • Energy Efficiency in Product Design
      • An Example: Energy Efficiency in Data Centers
    • Chapter 8 Chemicals, Materials, and Waste
      • Chemistry and the Law
      • Packaging and Documentation
      • Waste and Renewal
    • Chapter 9 Water and Other Natural Resources
      • Social Considerations
      • Business Considerations
      • Calculating the Water Footprint
      • Trading Virtual Water
      • Other Natural Resources
    • Chapter 10 An Example of Eco-Engineering: Interface, Inc.
      • An Aggressive Initiative with Very Specific Goals
    • Chapter 11 Eco-Engineering: The Grass Is Always Greener
      • Carbon Neutrality: Good Start but Not Enough
      • Greenwashing and Green Noise
      • Measuring and Sharing with OpenEco
      • Part II: Summary, and What’s Next
  • Part III: Intellectual Responsibility
    • Chapter 12 Intellectual Property Law Fundamentals
      • IP 101: Core Concepts
      • Patents
      • Copyright
      • Trademarks
      • Trade Secrets
      • Nondisclosure Agreements
      • Employment Contracts and IP Ownership
      • Tip Sheet: Inbound and Outbound IP
      • How to Protect Your IP in Emerging Markets
      • Back to Patent Protection: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
    • Chapter 13 Open Source Software: Licenses and Leverage
      • “Free” Software Licenses
      • Nonfree but Free-Sounding Software Licenses
      • A Closer Look at the GPL
      • Contributor Agreements
      • Software Indemnity
    • Chapter 14 Creativity and Control
      • Maximizing the Cycle of Innovation
      • How We Got Here
      • Control over Interfaces
      • Innovation Commons
      • The Economics of Open Source
      • Beyond Software
      • Building an Open Source Community: Practical Advice from a Pro
    • Chapter 15 Protecting Digital Rights
      • Digital Rights Management
      • Is “Open DRM” an Oxymoron?
      • Fair Use and Other Concepts for Reducing Restrictions
      • Part III: Summary, and What’s Next
  • Part IV: Bringing It to Life
    • Chapter 16 Education of the Citizen Engineer
      • Updating Engineering Curricula
      • Advice for Engineering Students
      • Advice for Engineering New Hires
    • Chapter 17 Citizen Engineers in Action
  • Appendix
    • Lifecycle Phase Checklists
      • The "Make" Phase
      • The "Use" Phase
      • The "Renew" Phase
    • Required Reading for Citizen Engineers
  • Notes
  • Photo Credits
  • Index
    • A
    • B
    • C
    • D
    • E
    • F
    • H
    • H
    • I
    • J
    • K
    • L
    • M
    • N
    • O
    • P
    • Q
    • R
    • S
    • T
    • U
    • V
    • W
    • Y
    • Z