Reliable Electricity and Local Radio Broadcasts
  • Hi
    I am on the IEEE Humanitarian Initiative
    http://ewh.ieee.org/mu/r7-hic/about/hic/
    and
    http://ewh.ieee.org/mu/r7-hic/about/hic/

    My committee is focused on Reliable Electricity for the poorest nations.

    Since streaming radio requires electricity it is natural that the two efforts face similar challenges

    Interested in finding out more about radio projects that are using renewable energy to broadcast.

    Secondly,
    Working on local radio content in Oshawa with a focus on local history, music and events.

    Interested in finding out any Canadians involved in similar projects.

    Thanks
    Glenn McKnight
    glenn.mcknight@ieee.org
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  • Hi Glenn,

    Thanks for getting in touch with us.

    I love your question. As far as I can understand, you're talking about using renewable energy to power _streaming_ projects, as opposed to _broadcast_ projects.

    If it's a streaming project, it shouldn't be too hard, because usually the "station" is sending a stream to a data center, where it is retransmitted. Our data center in Germany, for example, has made it a point of running on 100 % wind power.

    In terms of broadcast projects, there have been a couple of stations that have run on photovoltaic solar panels, most notably KRUU-FM in Fairfield, Iowa.

    http://www.kruufm.com/about

    But even with the rapidly falling price of photovoltaic panels, you're still talking usually about an investment in the USD $75,000-$100,000 range, which is out of reach for most community radio stations, who are usually a hairs' breadth away from financial difficulty anyway.

    That said, our sister organization, the Media Development Loan Fund, has also worked with one of its clients in Indonesia - the radio network KBR 68H - to build hydroelectric generators for stations near large enough water sources. That's a pretty limited use case (you have to have a station close enough to a river), but it does work for a few.

    I'd also be interested to hear more about your efforts in this area too.

    Best regards,

    doug
    Douglas Arellanes
    Director of Innovation
    Sourcefabric, o.p.s.

    Find a way or make one.