/Witness/Al Jazeera
Nearly 150,000 homes in Argentina's rural communities do not have electricity.
/Witness/Al Jazeera
In northern Argentina, communities have traditionally survived with only one source of fuel: wood.
/Witness/Al Jazeera
'You
have to go out to the countryside and if you don't have food, you just
don't eat. You always need to have wood,' says one resident in Jujuy
province, in northwestern Argentina.
s/Al Jazeera
/Witness/Al Jazeera
Virginia Bauso is trying to promote solar energy as the main power source for entire villages in Argentina.
/Witness/Al Jazeera
'People
see it lights a fire and they can't believe it. Where's the gas?
Where's the wood? The electricity? It's magic,' says Bauso.
/Witness/Al Jazeera
Solar
energy can help power kitchens, heating, lighting and even phones.
Virginia Bauso roams the desert spreading innovative technology,
including a 'kiosk' she invented that cooks food using the sun's rays.
/Witness/Al Jazeera
Thanks to Bauso's work, the community of Misa Rumi is now almost 100 percent solar functional.
/Witness/Al Jazeera
Studies by the EcoAndina Foundation show that one solar cooker reduces household firewood consumption by 50 to 70 percent.
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'These communities have an ancestral way of life. They've been living here since before the Incas,' says Bauso.
/Witness/Al Jazeera
As
deforestation and desertification continue to ravage Argentina and
beyond, Bauso's vision could play a major role in charting a sustainable
path to energy independence.
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