Science, asked by Abenseb, 7 months ago

How are clectric cells used is danky life​

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Answered by bhupesh05raut
1

Answer:

This is how Ekuwa Atteh living in Sawayiti, a remote village in eastern Ghana, used to recharge her mobile phone: give the handset to someone in the village with a kerosene-run generator, pay a bush taxi driver who would bring it back charged after a day or two, or make a day trip to a nearby town herself.

"Recharging the handset used to bleed my budget. Sometimes it would cost me up to 4 cedis (£1.30) a week. Four." The emphasis on the amount betrays a hint of frustration in Atteh's voice. The cheap pay-as-you-go mobile phone is vital to her job as a midwife and part-time seamstress. However, for the mother of three, the necessity to frequently power the device often left her monthly income of 115 Ghana cedis (£37) stretched too thin.But everything changed after I found the donkey two years ago," Atteh's tone softens. "It charges my phone at home for a quarter of what I used to pay. Thanks to the donkey, my children are now able to study even after dark. And I have finally bought a small portable light," she beams.

Meet Burro, the donkey: a rechargeable battery with the face of the eponymous animal painted on it in bright green and black. The pocket-sized mule has not only boosted Atteh's savings since 2010, it is now also helping her deliver babies in better-lit conditions in the three neighbouring villages she serves.

The brain child of Whit Alexander, an American who designed Encarta world atlas while working for Microsoft and later co-founded the popular board game Cranium, Burro's rechargeable battery renting service has arguably become the most affordable and sustainable way to power thousands of households in the west African nation which have no access to electricity.

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