Solar Cooking
Register
(Google translations)
mNo edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
 
{{GoogleTranslateLinks}}<br>
 
{{GoogleTranslateLinks}}<br>
[http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http%3A%2F%2Fsolarcooking.wikia.com%2Fwiki%2FParaguay&sl=en&tl=es&hl=es&ie=UTF-8 Traducir esta página en español]
 
 
==News and Recent Developments==
 
==News and Recent Developments==
 
*'''February 2007:''' Paraguay became the first country in Latin America to offer a Master’s Degree in Sustainable Development, Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency. Paraguay is following the lead of [[Spain]], which has offered such a degree for five years. The degree is offered in response to global climate change and strains on global energy supplies. The 18-month course will cover themes such as sustainable development; energy management and efficiency; solar, wind and hydro energy applications; bio-fuels; project evaluation techniques; and economic management. The course contains both on-line and traditional classroom components. The course was organized by the UNESCO professorship in sustainability of the Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, the Universidad Nacional de Asunción (UNA), and several other universities in Spain, Paraguay, [[Nicaragua]] and [[Argentina]]. It is sponsored by the European Union's Urb-Al program, which links interested urban and rural organizations from various European and Latin American countries in decentralized cooperation networks. For more information about this course, contact Ing. Lisa Lugo (Universidad Católica “Nuestra Señora de la Asunción”) by e-mail: [mailto:lugo@uca.edu.py lugo@uca.edu.py]; or Ing. Juan Carlos Silvero (UNA) by e-mail: [mailto:jsilvero@ing.una.py jsilvero@ing.una.py].
 
*'''February 2007:''' Paraguay became the first country in Latin America to offer a Master’s Degree in Sustainable Development, Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency. Paraguay is following the lead of [[Spain]], which has offered such a degree for five years. The degree is offered in response to global climate change and strains on global energy supplies. The 18-month course will cover themes such as sustainable development; energy management and efficiency; solar, wind and hydro energy applications; bio-fuels; project evaluation techniques; and economic management. The course contains both on-line and traditional classroom components. The course was organized by the UNESCO professorship in sustainability of the Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, the Universidad Nacional de Asunción (UNA), and several other universities in Spain, Paraguay, [[Nicaragua]] and [[Argentina]]. It is sponsored by the European Union's Urb-Al program, which links interested urban and rural organizations from various European and Latin American countries in decentralized cooperation networks. For more information about this course, contact Ing. Lisa Lugo (Universidad Católica “Nuestra Señora de la Asunción”) by e-mail: [mailto:lugo@uca.edu.py lugo@uca.edu.py]; or Ing. Juan Carlos Silvero (UNA) by e-mail: [mailto:jsilvero@ing.una.py jsilvero@ing.una.py].

Revision as of 00:17, 25 July 2008

Searchbox


News and Recent Developments

  • February 2007: Paraguay became the first country in Latin America to offer a Master’s Degree in Sustainable Development, Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency. Paraguay is following the lead of Spain, which has offered such a degree for five years. The degree is offered in response to global climate change and strains on global energy supplies. The 18-month course will cover themes such as sustainable development; energy management and efficiency; solar, wind and hydro energy applications; bio-fuels; project evaluation techniques; and economic management. The course contains both on-line and traditional classroom components. The course was organized by the UNESCO professorship in sustainability of the Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, the Universidad Nacional de Asunción (UNA), and several other universities in Spain, Paraguay, Nicaragua and Argentina. It is sponsored by the European Union's Urb-Al program, which links interested urban and rural organizations from various European and Latin American countries in decentralized cooperation networks. For more information about this course, contact Ing. Lisa Lugo (Universidad Católica “Nuestra Señora de la Asunción”) by e-mail: lugo@uca.edu.py; or Ing. Juan Carlos Silvero (UNA) by e-mail: jsilvero@ing.una.py.
Paraguay Postage Stamp 2007
  • March 2007: Martin Almada reports that Paraguay has issued a postage stamp featuring a solar cooker. He feels the stamp is an advance in spreading awareness of solar cookers, and will contribute to environmental protection and energy conservation. He hopes that organizations elsewhere will follow this example and encourage creation of solar postage stamps in their own countries.
  • August 2006: Paraguay held its first international seminar on renewable energy in late March, drawing representatives not only from Paraguay but also from Argentina, Bolivia, Ecuador, Nicaragua, Venezuela, Greece, and Spain. The five-day seminar was an activity of the European Union's Urb-Al program, which links interested urban and rural organizations from various European and Latin American countries in decentralized cooperation networks. Efforts were made at the conference to form a network of universities in Paraguay to push for renewable energy. The universities were asked to consider developing a post-graduate course in renewable energy and energy efficiency. Contact: Martin Almada
Dr

Dr. Almada (center) receives the European Solar Prize

  • March 2006: Paraguay continues to be an exciting place when it comes to transforming lives through solar energy. Responsible for a long chain of successes are two closely entwined organizations: la Fundación Celestina Pérez de Almada and the CEDESOL Foundation. Led by Professor Martin Almada and engineer Jean-Claude Pulfer, the twin organizations bring solar energy out of the laboratories and universities to people in need. Their projects provide enough solar equipment and training to transform whole villages, creating solar futures in several villages, and bringing those futures into the present, one village at a time. With support from the Swiss Embassy in Paraguay, the Almada-Pulfer team recently supplied solar cooking equipment to two schools for lunch preparation. Solar food dryers will provide out-of-season healthy fruit snacks to students. Dr. Almada was recently awarded a prestigious European Solar Prize from the European Association for Renewable Energies (EUROSOLAR). The award honors his “commitment for the use of renewable energies in order to give people hope and find a way out of poverty.” You can find more information on this award and view a short video of Dr. Almada’s work here.
  • July 2005: The Fundación Celestina Pérez de Almada continues to expand its solar program and to gain new allies. In March, the foundation began cooperating with Essen, a company that manufactures cooking pots that work well with parabolic-type solar cookers. A demonstration was held in Asuncion where popular local foods were solar cooked. Ms. Graciela Stanchuk, an international manager for Essen, pledged that the company would pursue further solar cooking tests. The Foundation has also developed a solar energy training program for students and school personnel, to be funded in part by the Swiss Embassy in Paraguay, and has begun making large Scheffler reflectors, of which two have already been installed. A Scheffler dish with 4.5-square-meters of reflective surface is being used to cook fruits at a juice and jam factory in Clorinda, Argentina. A second dish with 8-square-meters of surface will power an oven that reaches 250°C.

Climate, Culture, and Special Considerations

Documents

Reports

Articles in the media

Web pages

Contacts

NGOs based in or working in the Paraguay

Individuals

Manufacturers and vendors

See Also