Africa Water, Sanitation & Hygiene Nov - Dec Vol. 9 No.6 | Page 13

NEWS in brief Global Highlights The Nano Membrane Toilet receives further funding The Nano Membrane Toilet has received further funding from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to continue the development of the toilet. This next phase will take Cranfield University in the UK up to January 2016 when it will have a prototype ready for field testing. The university reports to be excited to start work again after a 6 month break. New prime minister Stefan Löfven said he was committed to “leading the fight against climate change” in his first speech. The university will also continue to work on some of the components from phase one, particularly the initial collection chamber, the membrane, the flush and the screw, the latter in collaboration with University of Kwazulu - Natal. The biggest change to them is that rather than coating the dried solids, where they are now looking to combust them in the toilet using a gasifier - will be working with RTI International who are already testing their gasifier in India. This changes the energy balance of the toilet, for example they can now consider recovering the water using a heat exchanger instead of the beads, and won’t have to use the bicycle power generator or hand crank to power the membrane processes. “As a proportion of their GDP that makes it the most ambitious pledge to date. If Germany pledged an equivalent amount of their GDP, their €1bn pledge would have been more than 3.5bn, and the US would have to pledge around US$ 15bn,” said Tim Gore, a climate finance expert at Oxfam International. These new components will require changes to the overall toilet design, and also an intelligent control system which they will work on with Three Bird Swan. The university will also continue to collect the perceptions of our target users, through interviews with the customers of Clean Team in Ghana. Pic: – Abhimanyu/Flickr diverted from existing development projects. The $500 million will be delivered over a four-year period. “We are not eroding our important international aid work,” Åsa Romson, Sweden’s environment minister and vice prime minister told Swedish newspaper Svenska Dagbladet. Sweden’s centre-left minority government will announce the budget bill on 23 October. “That’s the kind of real leadership we need to fill the fund and to send the signal that governments are serious about tackling climate change. The pledge does still need to be approved by the Swedish parliament, so we hope they follow the leadership the new government is showing.” The money will go into the UN-backed Green Climate Fund, which will channel climate finance towards poor countries. Financial pledges from developed countries are expected to amount to $100 billion a year from 2020. So far, countries have been slow to come forward, with around $2.3 billion in the pot so far, mainly provided by France and Germany. Sweden had previously given another $40 million. Until recently, the structure and safeguards of the GCF had been in limbo. This uncertainty had discouraged countries like the US and UK from making contributions to the Fund. A board meeting which concluded on Sunday in Barbados removed the final obstacles to potential pledges, observers said. States are now expected to promise new money at a pledging session this November. UN General Assembly Adopts Resolution on SDGs report On 10 September, the UN General Assembly adopted a resolution that paves the way for the incorporation of sustainable development goals into the post-2015 development agenda. At the opening of the 69th session of the General Assembly, the body’s new President, Sam Kahamba Kutesa, declared the theme of this year “Delivering on and implementing a Transformative Post-2015 Development Agenda”, reports the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs. The framework shall strive to eradicate poverty and hunger and promote sustained and inclusive economic growth, argued the president. By the end of 2014