Tag: water hyacinth

  • Making handicrafts with water hyacinth

    Achenyo Idachaba-Obaro is a business analyst and CEO MitiMeth, a company that makes handicrafts and other products from water hyacinths. In this interview with Yetunde Oladeinde, she talks about how she started, her work with communities through empowering and training women, as well as winning the Carter Initiative award for women in Sub–Saharan Africa

    What were you doing before this; your first job?

    I was consulting in the area of waste recovery and carbon finance, before MitiMeth. Just before that experience, I worked in the oil industry. My first job, however, was as a programme analyst with State Farm Insurance. I wrote codes and supported an accounting information system.

    I studied Computer Science and Economics at the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife. I later went on to study Applied Computer Science at Illinois State University and Business at Cornell University in the U.S.

    How did you discover the opportunities in working with water hyacinth?

    It was divine providence. I happened to be at the right place at the right time and had the right mindset for discovering an opportunity. I mentioned earlier that I had done some work in the area of waste recovery and utilisation. So, there was a keen interest on my part in that area.

    Then one day in late 2009, I happened to be in Lagos on the 3rd Mainland Bridge during the water hyacinth peak infestation season. I saw a few fishing boats hemmed in and grounded by dense mats of water hyacinths. That vivid image set the ball rolling to find out how to make the waterways more accessible and create something beneficial from the weed.

    What were the initial challenges for you?

    I would say that finding local information on the infestation of aquatic weeds in Nigeria and what interventions had been done was challenging. I did not want to reinvent the wheel if anything had been done and all I could find was spotty information. I eventually found a report published in 2002 by NIFFR in New Bussa. As dated as the report was, it ended up being a good starting point. I used that information in conjunction with research from other parts of the world to have a better understanding of the plant. The other typical challenges of starting a business from ground zero in Nigeria were there but I just had to stay focused, persevere and keep at it.

    What are some of the things you do and how long have you been doing this?

    We are into production and training. MitiMeth was registered as a business in 2011, so we’ve been at this for almost eight years. The year prior (2010) was spent testing the model to see if it could work in Nigeria.

    How is this linked with the Sustainable Development Goals, SDGs?

    Our work at MitiMeth is linked to five of the SDGs and prior to the SDGs, it was linked to the MDGs. So, there is greater purpose with what we are doing. MitiMeth is solving both unemployment and environmental problems and our activities tie into five of the SDGs. We empower women through our craft workshops (SDG5). Through distribution platforms we are reducing poverty and providing decent work to craft producing communities (SDGs1 & 8). We are utilising an abundant resource on Nigeria’s waterways, thereby reducing evapo-transpiration and climate change through the harvesting of invasive aquatic weeds (SDGs13 & 14).

    Let’s talk about some of the communities you train and work with. What has been the experience?

    It’s been a ‘light bulb’ experience for us all. The MitiMeth team typically arrives in the communities excitedly proclaiming we can transform Gbeborun, Toble, Lakwa, Gbankilo into useful products. You can only imagine the level of scepticism and cynicism with which the message is received. When we show the communities the woven water hyacinth products, a little pandemonium follows as people want to touch and feel the products. Our work in the communities is as a result of partnerships between MitiMeth, the private sector and the public sector. We have amazing partners that have supported the training of these communities over the years. To date, we have trained over 350 women, youth and farmers from over 20 communities.

    How has doing this influenced your personality or lifestyle?

    I love what I am doing because it has made me discover and project a part of me that was perhaps latent. My personality is pretty much what it has always been. However, my lifestyle has become more casual as compared with when I had a corporate career. If I have to hop in a keke NAPEP (or on an okada) to get to where I need to, I will do so in a heartbeat without thinking twice about it!

    Can we talk about some memorable moments in life and your career?

    I have had several memorable moments: big, small and everything in between. And I am grateful for each of them. Some of such moments include gaining admission into an Ivy League school for an MBA and then working for an oil company thereafter for over a decade. Also relocating to Nigeria after spending close to two decades was quite memorable because quite a few people thought it was quite a strange trajectory. But I was determined. The evolution of MitiMeth from ground zero has been quite memorable with the breakthroughs, the recognition and the awards that I have garnered over the past eight years. Another memorable recent life event for me was when I got married at 49. I have been extremely blessed.

    What drives your passion for the arts?

    When I think of the arts, I think about expression, I think about creativity, I think about aesthetics and I think about our stories. No pun intended, but I am passionate about weaving a story around the transformation of water hyacinth and the discovery of beauty in unexpected places.

    What are the other things that occupy your time?

    Apart from MitiMeth, other things that occupy my time are family, friends and travel. Ironically, though, family, friends and travel are also an integral part of MitiMeth.

    If you had to advise young people today, what would you tell them?

    I would tell them to remember that life is made up of seasons. It is important to make the most out of every season you’ve been blessed with. Don’t try to run ahead of your season.

    Have a moral code that guides you and hold on to your values. Stick with your convictions and shun compromise. Be accountable, a person of integrity, hardworking and reliable.

    Toe the path of innovation and dare to be different. Dream big but start small.

    And I’ll end with a favourite quote of mine.

    “The talent of success is nothing more than doing what you can do well, and doing well whatever you do without thought of fame. If it comes at all it will come because it is deserved, not because it is sought after.” – Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

    What are some of the recognitions you have received doing this?

    We’ve been extremely blessed as mentioned earlier to have been recognised both domestically and on the global stage. And I’ll just highlight some the recognitions we have received to date. In 2012, MitiMeth was a featured winner of the Sustainable Solutions Showcase (SSS) organised by the Africa Roundtable and Conference on Corporate Sustainability and Responsibility. The following year, MitiMeth received the Local Raw Materials Content Award from the Raw Materials Research and Development Council (RMRDC) for its innovative use of water hyacinth. In 2014, I became the Laureate for Sub-Saharan Africa for the Cartier Women’s Initiative Awards. In 2015, MitiMeth was featured in a special edition of CNN’s African Start-Up programme. In January 2015, I was nominated for the Creative Industry Award – “Emerging Female Entrepreneur of the Year” by the Creative Entrepreneurs Association of Nigeria (CEAN). I also had the opportunity to share the story of MitiMeth on the TED stage in 2015. In 2016, I was selected to be a Cherie Blair Foundation Road-to-Growth Scholar. In 2017, MitiMeth received the ACE Award from Bellafricana for the Best Eco-Friendly Product Innovation. I was named among YNaija and LLA’s 2017 100 Most Inspiring Women in Nigeria and I am also a 2017 Vital Voices VVLEAD Fellow. I am also a YouWIN!Women Awardee and TEEP Awardee.

     What plans for the future?

    Our plans include building a robust value chain revolving around the upcycling of water hyacinth and other forms of waste. We want to establish vibrant craft enterprises across the country so we can grow and scale up our social and environmental impact in the communities. And we also look forward to building MitiMeth into a global brand. We can’t do this alone, so we are looking to build partnerships with both the public and private sectors to help us deliver.

  • Our Girls; Water hyacinth; clone? NASS out? population?

    Our Chibok girls were kidnapped on April 15, 2014. Inexplicably our Dapchi girl, 15, Leah Sharibu is not released.

    Congratulations to Super Falcons for winning the ninth Africa Women Cup of Nations, AWCON. Well deserved.

    A few weeks ago, the Senate and I believe the House of Representatives suspended sitting because the sound system was out. If every Nigerian institution closed for one day or more because of a sound system failure, we should expect nothing for development. Surely the National Assembly, NASS, is still in Nigeria and specifically in Abuja where sound systems are easily available for hire within an hour or two. What a disgraceful example of waste of public trust to the citizens. Meanwhile the destructive activities of herdsmen continue unabated.

    Channels TV carried an item on the Mountaintop University research into the use of the weed known as water hyacinth to make paper. This is very good as the water hyacinth seems to be ravaging all our waterways, hindering boat transportation and obstructing local fishing activities as well as covering large areas of water hindering light and gas exchange altering the eco-environment for fish, algae and other marine life.  If you use a social web research programme like Google, Bing etc, you will find 20 other uses for water hyacinth which you may also champion by informing others in your local area and through your local institutions like universities and polytechnics and schools. A look from the Third Mainland Bridge will attest to the serious nature of this water hyacinth epidemic

    President denies being a clone. Very good. When he is ill, they say he is too ill to rule. When he is well, they he is too well to be himself. Me I do not know o! I have acted old and young people on stage with the help of a little makeup. Medically, the matter is simple. Confirmation of who is who is as easy as a DNA test on the whole family which confirms parentage of the children and closes the case. Surely the whole family was not cloned if anyone was cloned at all. Therefore get that DNA done by an impartial witness.

    We the citizenry must become much more politically active and articulate our expectations of future government policies. We must support only candidates willing to work along the lines we chose as the expected future of the nation. Some suggested lines include support candidates willing to work to get:

    1. Politicians on Grade Level 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 the highest for serving presidents.
    2. Home state to fix the salary and pay it and accommodation since the politician is on posting from the state.  Similarly LGAs can pay the state assembly members
    3. Reduction of ridiculous political salaries and perks SAPing Nigeria dry.
    4. The imposition of sitting allowances
    5. The cancellation of constituency projects and route all development project request in good time through the relevant ministerial budget structure for approval and routine execution by the relevant ministry with no further interference or financial involvement of the NASS chambers
    6. A huge increase in budgets to health and education
    7. A huge increase in FG, state and LGA scholarship and youth empowerment schemes on a scale more in proportion to the student population.
    8. A single house by cutting out one particularly the senate
    9. Insist that judges finish cases before moving on promotion
    10. To put people policies in place

    This sounds like a tall order. However most elections are won or lost utilising only 40 or 45% of the vote. The rest of the votes are unused or unusable if criminally obtained. The legitimate voters dissatisfied with the current big two or three parties can change the political narrative simply by coming out and concentrating or one candidate.

    Really 190 million???? Guesstimated census and now supported by UN! Unfortunately, we are just parrots repeating conjectures and invention of concocted ‘fake’ census figures. Our National Population Commission, NPC has failed to pass the truth and integrity test and any figures will not be believed by the aggrieved. Only the majority is happy to preserve the imposed status quo. Electricity Corporation of Nigeria, ECN, Power Holdings Company of Nigeria, PHCN and successors are expert at what in Nigeria has become known as a ‘Guestimate’, a hyper-inflated imagined bill designed to punish the customer or perhaps force him to pay a bribe. Old NITEL became a super-specialist if you made the mistake of having international calls on your phone.

    We keep boasting that we are 190m people in Nigeria. How? Based on false census figure bloated for politico-ethno-religious malicious reasons since the 50s when the British tampered with the results to precipitate our life-long census problem? Assuming a conservative 20-30% inflation figure, we are probably 150m-ish. If we are actually the figure advertised, our successive leaders, most still alive should hang their heads in collective shame Nigeria’s ‘failure to thrive’ and refusal to meet all our Millennium and Sustainable Developmental Goals milestones allocated by the UN agencies for all countries.

    Does any of the incumbent NASS members deserve to be sent back after they effectively stabbed Nigeria in the heart by messing up the budget year by seven months, and persisting in taking ridiculous and unjustified salaries and perks totally out of proportion to the service, if any, that they may collectively or individually have rendered.

     

    • Uncover ‘I LOVE NIGERIA’ KNOWLEDGEABLE CANDIDATES for 2019 -SDG 16.     
  • Ambode begins clean-up of Lagos waterways

    Ambode begins clean-up of Lagos waterways

    …Commissions water hyacinth, debris removal machines

    Lagos State Governor, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode on Thursday begun the process of ridding the State’s waterways of debris and hyacinth, with the view to boost water transportation and positively scale up activities relating to the waterways.

    Speaking at the commissioning of two Water Hyacinth and Debris Removal Machines held at Ebute Ero Jetty, the Governor said for a long time, hyacinth which is otherwise known as aquatic weed, had been a major source of concern with attendant challenges to the waterways sector.

    The Governor, who was represented by the Commissioner for the Environment, Dr. Babatunde Adejare, said the machines were purchased by his administration to frontally address the challenges posed by water hyacinth, adding that same was in line with the strategic implementation of Lagos master plan for the waterways.

    He said, “We have bought the machines to take away debris and hyacinth from the Lagoon. The machines will encourage water transportation and this initiative is necessary now that we are working towards clean-up of the waterways.

    “It will also encourage fishery so that the water economy will be improved upon,” the Governor said.

    In her welcome remarks, Managing Director of Lagos State Waterways Authority  (LASWA), Engr. Abisola Kamson, said the commissioning was a dream come true as the machines would go a long way in eradicating the menace of water hyacinth on marine ecosystems of the State particularly the Ikorodu, Ajah, Badagry, Lagos Island, Oworonshoki, Mile 2 and Epe axis.

    She said aside negatively affecting the socio-economic activities of fishermen and inhabitants of the riverine communities, water hyacinth, which is a seasonal threat, had brought about damages to propulsion system of boats thus affecting water transportation.

    Giving technical insight as to the workings of the machine, Kamson said it acts like an underwater lawn mower and cuts the vegetation, as well as collects and store weeds and debris, while it is fitted with a pick up conveyor at the forward end which can be lowered up to six feet deep into the water for effective cleaning of the waterways.

    She said: “This symbolic gesture by the Lagos State Government is jump-starting the clean-up of our waterways and preparing ground for other revolutionary activities of LASWA’s development plan to transform the Lagos Waterways to world class standards.

    “To us at LASWA and indeed the entire waterways family, we will remain ever grateful to Governor Ambode and the entire State cabinet for arming us with teeth to bite the water hyacinth menace that continuously traumatize our waterways.”

    She also pledged that the machines would not be under-utilized, assuring that they would be deployed immediately for clean-up of the waterways.

    Besides, Kamson said arrangement had been concluded with the Ministry of Environment to increase monitoring activities with the view to ensuring that those who disrespect the waterways through dumping of waste, pollution, defecation and other illegal activities are made to face the full wrath of the law.

    On his part, Chairman, Lagos State Chapter of Association of Tourism Boat Water Operators, Chief Wellington Ilori-Akingbulu commended Governor Ambode and his team for the initiative, saying the machines would go a long way to remove the incessant accidents and engine problems caused by water hyacinth and debris.

  • The other side of water hyacinth

    The other side of water hyacinth

    In spite of the huge threat it poses to sea foods and water transportation, water hyacinth has been found to be useful in many ways, reports KUNLE AKINRINADE. 

    It was an unusual scene at the seaside in Ipakodo area of Ikorodu, Lagos State, about two months ago. For about 20 minutes, Tovishuku Shama agonised over the loss of his fishing boat to water hyacinth on the lagoon. He looked in a particular direction, staring intently at the wreck which his boat, his only source of livelihood, had become. He sighed heavily and his eyes glistened with tears.

    There was nothing anyone around didn’t say to console him but he paid no attention to bystanders. As he made to speak with our reporter, the red rims of his eyes blinked and a rivulet of tears rolled down his cheeks.

    For 40-year-old Shama, nothing on earth can be more traumatic than the reversal of business fortune occasioned by the damage that water hyacinth had done to his fishing boat. Lately, he has had to contend with incessant damage of his boat by the aquatic plant while foraging for fish on the lagoon and the inevitable task of fixing the outboard engine.

    Wednesday December 11, 2013 had begun like any other day for the peasant fisherman, who left his home early for the sea. He had barely set out in his boat when the engine of his boat was clogged by hyacinth, aborting the trip and damaging the engine. “I am still in shock,” he said. “This is the third time in two weeks that the boat engine would be damaged by water hyacinth. Only last week, I spent N5,000 on its repairs and I am already broke.

    “I had set out this morning in the hope that I would have a bountiful harvest of fish to sell, but my hope is dashed now. I had hoped to make enough money to not only celebrate Christmas but to also save enough money to defray my children’s school fees when they return to school in January. Now, my source of livelihood is being threatened with the damage done to my outboard engine by water hyacinth.”

    He added: “Water hyacinth has become a nemesis to our business as fishermen. It is a perennial problem that we have been battling with without tangible assistance from the concerned authorities. Many of my colleagues have lost their outboard engines to the corrosive plant that usually assails the water for several months every year.”

    Shama shared the same fate with Goriola Hammed, who operated a fishing canoe in Isheri, Ifo Local Government Area, Ogun State. The father of two, whose wife is a nursing mother, lamented his fate during an encounter with our reporter penultimate week, saying: “Water hyacinth has damaged my canoe many times this year. Underneath the plant are logs of woods that hit at a canoe unexpectedly, causing a lot of damage to it. Once that happens on the lagoon, the canoe sinks. I have had such terrible experiences but survived mainly because I could swim out of the river. ”

    Setonji David, a fisherman at Oworonsoki, a Lagos suburb, wore a melancholic look during the week. Although his outboard is in good shape, his routine fishing expedition has been curtailed by water hyacinth. The situation, he said, had affected his income with no hope of finding a solution to loss of revenue.

    He said: “These days, I cannot go too far to forage for fish because of the presence of water hyacinth on the lagoon. In this business, the farther you go on the lagoon the more fish you get. I cannot dare the water hyacinth because I am not prepared to lose my boat now. Besides, fish don’t survive once there is massive water hyacinth on the lagoon, hence, we no longer get plenty fish to sell nowadays.”

    Effect on water transportation

    Water transportation has become the saving grace for residents of Ikorodu who work on the Lagos Island. Many of them prefer to travel on water to their offices in Ebute Ero, CMS or Lekki, to beat the gridlock that characterises the Ikorodu-Mile 12 Road currently undergoing reconstruction.

    However, operators of private boats in Ikorodu have had their fortune reversed by the menacing plant in recent times. Among the officially recognised jetties in the area are Metro, Ipakodo, Origin and Tarzan, among others. Since the plant surfaced last August, operators of Metro jetty were forced to move their operational base to the nearby Origin Jetty. It was not that the Origin Jetty was free of water hyacinth, but boats could still sail with little hindrance.

    Our correspondent gathered that the aquatic plant easily damages the engines of the boats. A source at the Metro Jetty explained that the plant had damaged about eight engines in one month. ”We have since relocated to another jetty, Origin Jetty, nearby because our operation here is threatened by the plant,” he said.

    A closer look at the jetty showed that many of the boats had been abandoned, while scrap metallic, plastic and wooden materials were packed inside some of them.

    Perennial problem

    Findings revealed that the plant surfaces on the waterways every August. It may remain till February of the following year if it is not cleared.

    A source at the jetty, who spoke in confidence, said: “Water hyacinth surfaces in August every year and remains till February. It blocks the routes and it is with caution and difficulty that the ferries move in such a situation. A journey of 10 minutes could take more than 30 minutes, with its implications for the men and machines.

    “In the morning, the plant normally covers the take-off point at the jetty. So, the ferries have difficulty navigating through these weeds (water hyacinth). As the wind changes direction, the weeds move in the middle of the lagoon. In the evening when the ferries are returning from Lagos Island back to Ikorodu, they run into them. In the process, the weeds clog the engine and it begins to overheat. Ultimately, the engine develops a problem and we may have to change it.”

    Another operator, Wale Shokunbi expatiated further, saying: “There are logs of wood scattered on the waterways. Over time, the woods hide under the hyacinth. They are not usually visible to ferries’ drivers. So, on many occasions, they run into the woods covered by water hyacinth and get the engines damaged.”

     

    Hapless victims

    Speaking with The Nation, an operator, Shola Adeniji, said the emergence of the plant was one of the challenges that nature had thrown their way. She added that the Lagos State Government had been tackling the problem with little success.

    She said that the Lagos State Waste Management Authority (LAWMA) had made attempts to clean up the hyacinth. “They come with rakes and shovels to clear this huge water hyacinth. At other times, they use their hands to pick them,” she added.

    Our correspondent, indeed, sighted some men of the waste clearing agency using their hands and shovels to remove the plant on the side of the lagoon behind the newly constructed office of the Lagos State Ferry Services at Ipakodo.

    Efforts made by our correspondent to speak with the authorities of LAWMA met a brick wall as the deputy spokesman of the agency, who simply identified himself as Mr. Adu, refused to speak with our reporter who contacted him on telephone. A text message sent to him by our reporter was also not returned.

    Monster plant

    According to the University of Florida’s Centre for Aquatic and Invasive Plants, ”Water Hyacinth is a free-floating perennial plant that can grow to a height of three feet. The dark green leave blades are circular to elliptical in shape attached to a spongy, inflated petiole. Underneath the water is a thick, heavily branched, dark fibrous root system. Water hyacinth has a striking light blue to violet flowers located on a terminal spike. Water hyacinth is a very aggressive invader and can form thick mats covering the entire surface of the water; they can cause oxygen depletions and fish death.

    “Apart from hampering boat movement; these plants can take over a good fishing spot and consume the oxygen, making it very difficult to fish or for fish to survive. Water hyacinth has no known direct food value to wildlife and is considered a pest species”.

    Physical/ecology problems

    Far more than any other threats, water hyacinth creates humongous physical and ecological problems. A mass of water hyacinth clogs waterways, making boating, fishing and other activities on the water impossible. It degrades water quality, which in turn reduces fishing opportunities. Whenever water hyacinth takes over water, it limits the use and essentially makes it difficult for boats and swimmers. When mats of water hyacinth are formed, underwater visibility and biodiversity is significantly compromised and divers are unable to enjoy various underwater features.

    From pest to wealth

    Despite the threats posed by the plant to aquatic life and water transportation, it has been discovered to be a source of huge economic benefits to mankind. The plant can be converted to handcrafts, fertiliser, biogas and animal feed, among others. Sadly, Nigeria is yet to take advantage of the availability of the plant in the production of these items.

    An environmental waste management expert and Chief Executive Officer of Biotechnic Waste Management Services Ltd, Lagos, Dr. Adeola Aluko, said: “Although water hyacinth is widely known for its destructive presence on water, especially to sea foods and boats, the plant has a lot of benefits and could be used to produce biogas, crafts, fertiliser and animal feeds. It is, however, sad that both state and federal governments have not been looking in the direction of the economic benefits of water hyacinth.

    “In countries like China and Europe, it is now being used to produce the items that I have earlier mentioned. Indeed, it has led to the emergence of cottage industries which use the plant to produce sundry items in many advanced countries. The plant can be found in several coastal communities in Lagos State such as Ikorodu, Epe, Ojo, Owode Onirin, Oworonsoki, Lagos Lagoon, Ebute Metta, among others, and government should look into its economic benefits and tap into it.”

    Commercial benefits

    In 2012, Miss Ogunlana Ayotide, then a final year Higher National Diploma (HND) student of Environmental Biology at the Yaba College of Technology, showcased some handcrafts made from water hyacinth. Some of her products included slippers, bags, bangles and earrings.

    She said: “Water hyacinth has become a threat and pest since it entered into the Nigerian waterways in the 1980s. It takes the plant about two weeks to cover the surface of the water and it is very difficult to eradicate. However, many people do not know that it also has commercial benefits. You can actually make so many things like fertiliser, biogas, paper pulp, soap, basket, slippers, bangles, earrings, wrist watches, fish feeds, cat feeds, etc from the plant.

    “Overseas, people have been using the plant to produce many things, but in Nigeria, such has not been done in Nigeria. That is the reason why I decided to replicate the research and we found that it is true. We collected the samples used in making these products from Owode Onirin waterways, but a large portion of the plant can also be found in the Ogun River, Lagos lagoon and in many rivers in the South-West region of Nigeria.

    “Government can create employment opportunities by encouraging local craft producers to make use of water hyacinth in the production of sundry products. By so doing, it would help to remove the plant from our waterways and by extension boost entrepreneurship in Nigeria. ”

    Paper: It has been found to be useful in the production of paper and many small-scale papermaking cottage industries using water hyacinth have been successful in a number of countries, including the Philippines, Indonesia and India.

    Fibre board: Another application of water hyacinth is the production of fiberboards for general-purpose use and also ‘bituminised’ board for use as a low cost roofing material.

    Yarn and rope: The fibre from the stems of the water hyacinth plant can be used to make rope. The stalk from the plant is shredded lengthways to expose the fibres and then left to dry for several days. The rope making process is similar to that of jute rope. The finished rope is treated with sodium metabisulphite to prevent it from rotting.

    In Bangladesh, the rope is used by a local furniture manufacturer who winds the rope around a cane frame to produce an elegant finished product.

    Basket work: In the Philippines, water hyacinth is dried and used to make baskets and matting for domestic use. The key to a good product is to ensure that the stalks are properly dried before being used. In India, water hyacinth is also used to produce similar goods for the tourism industry. Traditional basket making and weaving skills are used.

    Charcoal briquetting: This is an idea which has been proposed in Kenya to deal with the rapidly expanding carpets of water hyacinth which are evident on many parts of Lake Victoria. The proposal is to develop a suitable technology for the briquetting of charcoal dust from the pyrolysis of water hyacinth.

    Biogas production: The possibility of converting water hyacinth to biogas has been an area of major interest for many years. Conversion of other organic matters, usually animal or human waste, is a well established small and medium-scale technology in a number of developing countries, notably China and India.

    The process is one of anaerobic digestion which takes place in a reactor or digester, and the usable product is methane gas, which can be used as fuel for cooking, lighting or for powering an engine to provide shaft power. Other studies have been carried out, primarily in India with quantities of up to 4000 liters of gas per tonne of semi dried water hyacinth being produced with a methane content of up to 64% (Gopal, 1987).

    Most of the experiments have used a mixture of animal waste and water hyacinth. There is still no firm consensus on the design of an appropriate water hyacinth biogas digester.

    Animal fodder: Studies have shown that the nutrients in water hyacinth are available to ruminants. In Southeast Asia, some non-ruminant animals are fed rations containing water hyacinth. In China, pig farmers boil chopped water hyacinth with vegetable waste, rice bran, copra cake and salt to make a suitable feed. In Malaysia, fresh water hyacinth is cooked with rice bran and fish meal and mixed with copra meal as feed for pigs, ducks and pond fish.

    Similar practices are much used in Indonesia, the Philippines and Thailand. The use of water hyacinth for animal feed in developing countries could help solve some of the nutritional problems that exist in these countries.

    Fertilisers: Water hyacinth can be used on the land either as a green manure or as compost. As a green manure, it can be ploughed into the ground or used as mulch. The plant is ideal for composting.

    After removing the plant from the water, it can be left to dry for a few days before it is mixed with ash, soil and some animal manure. Microbial decomposition breaks down the fats, lipids, proteins, sugar and starch. The mixture can be left in piles to compost, the warmer climate of tropical countries accelerating the process and producing rich pathogen-free compost which can be applied directly to the soil.

    The compost increases soil fertility and crop yield and generally improves the quality of the soil. In developing countries where mineral fertiliser is expensive, it is an elegant solution to the problem of water hyacinth proliferation and also poor soil quality. In Sri Lanka, water hyacinth is mixed with organic municipal waste, ash and soil, composted and sold to local farmers and market gardeners.

    Fish feed: The Chinese grass carp is a fast growing fish which eats aquatic plants. Other fishes, such as the tilapia, silver carp and the silver dollar fish are all aquatic and can be used to control aquatic weeds. The manatee or sea cow has also been suggested as another herbivore which could be used for aquatic weed control.

    Water hyacinth has also been used indirectly to feed fish. Dehydrated water hyacinth has been added to the diet of channel catfish fingerlings to increase their growth. It has also been noted that the decay of water hyacinth after chemical control releases nutrients which promote the growth of phytoplankton with subsequent increases in fish yield.

     

    Source: Faculty of Basic Sciences, University of Mazadaran, Iran.