From favelas to the White
House, tiles turn footsteps into electricity
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[July 18, 2016]
By Lin Taylor
LONDON (Thomson Reuters Foundation) -
It was in Morro da Mineira favela, in Rio de Janeiro, that British
engineer Laurence Kemball-Cook first saw how his floor tiles could
make a difference.
Children were playing soccer as their families cheered them on - a
typical scene, except the match was being played at night in an area
normally off-limits to slum dwellers after dark.
Under their feet were 200 tiles that Kemball-Cook and his team had
installed with funding from oil giant, Shell.
As the children ran up and down the pitch, their kinetic energy was
being stored in batteries, and along with solar panels, used to
illuminate the field.
"The parents saw that their kids were taking part in a real-life
science experiment and how inspiring it was," said Kemball-Cook,
founder and chief executive of Pavegen, which produces the tiles
that convert footsteps into electricity.
The project was unveiled by Brazilian soccer legend Pele, who called
it a first in the world, according to media reports.
Nearly two years on, the soccer pitch is still being powered by
children's footsteps, and there are now over 100 Pavegen
installations in more than 30 countries.
The tiles have been laid down in London's Heathrow Airport, Sandton
City shopping center in Johannesburg, and another soccer pitch in
Lagos, Nigeria.
POWERED BY FOOTSTEPS
Kemball-Cook, who is confident his tiles will last a lifetime, will
also see them installed outside the White House in Washington DC
later this year.
"We've got an aim to cover every city in the world with our tiles to
provide a tangible off-grid energy source," he told the Thomson
Reuters Foundation.
There are still around 1 billion people in the world without access
to electricity. Ensuring they are able to access to affordable,
reliable energy that does not harm the planet is a concern for many
policymakers and social entrepreneurs alike.
Instead of using sunlight or wind power, which varies in
availability, Pavegen tiles work by converting the downward weight
of a person's footsteps into electricity through an internal
flywheel.
Each step generates five watts of power but the more the flywheel
turns, the more power it produces, which is why Pavegen tiles work
best in high traffic areas, Kemball-Cook said.
But for all the successes, Kemball-Cook said his concept was birthed
from failure, after he struggled to design a new type of streetlight
for British energy provider Eon.
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"I failed to do so and hung my head in shame and left Eon," said the
Loughborough University graduate, who devised his first Pavegen tile
shortly after in 2009 from his London bedroom.
Nearly 130 prototypes later, Kemball-Cook launched a new version of
the product in May. Known as 'V3' and triangular in shape, he said
it can produce 200 times more energy than the original square-shaped
tile.
STEPS AND SOCIAL MEDIA
To encourage people to care about renewable energy, the tile
collects data and connects with smartphones to track the amount of
energy produced through footsteps.
In May, Kemball-Cook partnered with ex-Apple marketing executive
Jeff Martin, founder of Tribal Planet, which builds mobile platforms
that rewards consumers for doing "social good".
Through Martin's technology, people walking on Pavegen V3 tiles can
use their footsteps to redeem rewards at retailers or make donations
through their phones - incentives to keep users engaged even if they
lose interest in clean energy or climate.
"In a social media world, you have to do it that way to make it
sustainable otherwise people forget about it and move onto the next
thing," Martin told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
"We're softly encouraging people to see the value of their own
energy, not just the energy they consume," he said.
Kemball-Cook said integrating Pavegen tiles into slums, roads,
shopping centers and sport stadiums around the world were all firmly
in his sights, adding that creating sustainable cities for future
generations was his main priority.
"Communities doing something as simple as walking can now change
their communities," he said. "People are the solutions."
(Reporting by Lin Taylor @linnytayls, Editing by Katie Nguyen.;
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