Science, asked by Khushant007, 9 months ago

Story on magic of solar energy (plz don't write a speech or short story it should be of 3 minutes)

Answers

Answered by sachinkumar52129
5

here is your answer:-Santa Kumari Mukhiya 61, is a resident of Shivasatakshi Municipality in Jhapa. The dry season has always been major problem for her crops. That all changed the day she heard of solar water pumps.

Santa Kumari Mukhiya 61, is a resident of Shivasatakshi Municipality in Jhapa. The dry season has always been major problem for her crops. That all changed the day she heard of solar water pumps.She owns 22 Katha of land (0.74 ha) and farms five Katha (0.17 ha) to feed her family of nine with rice, maize, mustard and millet as staple. “I faced from my neighbor upon leasing their water pumps to plant rice saplings even waiting in queue” shares Ms. Santa in dismay. She had to pay NRs 500 for five hours per day when using the water pump. During one bad stretch of weather, she had to bear the cost for 4-5 days. Santa Kumari was forced to pay for the water pumps at least 3-4 times a year.

Santa Kumari Mukhiya 61, is a resident of Shivasatakshi Municipality in Jhapa. The dry season has always been major problem for her crops. That all changed the day she heard of solar water pumps.She owns 22 Katha of land (0.74 ha) and farms five Katha (0.17 ha) to feed her family of nine with rice, maize, mustard and millet as staple. “I faced from my neighbor upon leasing their water pumps to plant rice saplings even waiting in queue” shares Ms. Santa in dismay. She had to pay NRs 500 for five hours per day when using the water pump. During one bad stretch of weather, she had to bear the cost for 4-5 days. Santa Kumari was forced to pay for the water pumps at least 3-4 times a year.Manual pumping of the hand pump was tiresome for her family, often leaving their hands full of blisters. “I used electric pumps and it cost me NRs 1100 in utility bills each month to plant staple, grow vegetables and water livestock. I was very cautious in using electric pumps and even compromised to limit the expense” she mumbles.

Santa Kumari Mukhiya 61, is a resident of Shivasatakshi Municipality in Jhapa. The dry season has always been major problem for her crops. That all changed the day she heard of solar water pumps.She owns 22 Katha of land (0.74 ha) and farms five Katha (0.17 ha) to feed her family of nine with rice, maize, mustard and millet as staple. “I faced from my neighbor upon leasing their water pumps to plant rice saplings even waiting in queue” shares Ms. Santa in dismay. She had to pay NRs 500 for five hours per day when using the water pump. During one bad stretch of weather, she had to bear the cost for 4-5 days. Santa Kumari was forced to pay for the water pumps at least 3-4 times a year.Manual pumping of the hand pump was tiresome for her family, often leaving their hands full of blisters. “I used electric pumps and it cost me NRs 1100 in utility bills each month to plant staple, grow vegetables and water livestock. I was very cautious in using electric pumps and even compromised to limit the expense” she mumbles.With sheer excitement, Santa Kumari shares the multipurpose use of solar pumps with its benefits. She is thankful to Winrock International and SAHARA Cooperatives for unlocking credit to help her install the solar pump. “I am a member of Sahara cooperative with 20 women members. I was heavily fascinated to install solar water pump when Sahara introduced it to our group” smiles Ms. Santa. She is no longer concerned about electricity bills to use water. After the solar pump installation, her utility bill has been reduced from NRs 1100 to NRs 300 per month. She saves NRs 800 per month and is now confident in paying a monthly installment of NRs 2000 over the next 24 months until fully owning the solar pump system

i hope its help more to more so like as form of brainlaist mark.

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