Visual Project Management | Grant Work: The Power of Poo: Biogas_Paskova_007

Gakuru Yassin, 21, carries a branch found in the forest to be used as wood for cooking on November 13, 2017 in Mount Kigali, Rwanda. Nearly half of all Rwandans live in poverty, relying on small-scale farming for survival without gas or electricity. With so many women and children spending hours of the day foraging for wood used for cooking and light, often damaging their eyes, lungs, the forests and atmosphere, a little inventiveness helps. Enter cow and enter pig -- not just as a source of food, but also the heat needed to cook it. Or more specifically, their poo -- the fuel fed to a biogas digester, a tank that converts organic waste into methane.

Gakuru Yassin, 21, carries a branch found in the forest to be used as wood for cooking on November 13, 2017 in Mount Kigali, Rwanda.  

Nearly half of all Rwandans live in poverty, relying on small-scale farming for survival without gas or electricity. With so many women and children spending hours of the day foraging for wood used for cooking and light, often damaging their eyes, lungs, the forests and atmosphere, a little inventiveness helps. Enter cow and enter pig -- not just as a source of food, but also the heat needed to cook it. Or more specifically, their poo -- the fuel fed to a biogas digester, a tank that converts organic waste into methane.