Farai Musendo, a final year Chemical Engineering student of the National University of Science and Technology (NUST), Zimbabwe, has tapped into Zimbabwe’s waste problem, by designing a machinery that turns plastic to diesel. The innovative student has revealed that his innovation, if tried and tested, can be used to fuel millions of vehicles in Zimbabwe, and will also go a long way in ridding the country of its plastic waste problem. He said he will require an investment of $100,000 to complete research on his petrochemical innovation.
“This is value addition through litter. We collect used plastics and clean them before processing them into diesel. What I’ve are just samples and my passion of waste management drove me to do this. As a country we’re far from properly managing our waste. So this is part of waste management project and improving our energy sector. This could also create employment if it succeeds. We can create employment for people who would be collecting the waste on our behalf. 100 kilograms of plastic litter is equivalent to 55,2 liters of fuel,” said Musendo.
“The university encourages young and innovative students to come up with technological breakthroughs that can transform Zimbabwe to a science and technology driven economy. Innovation projects improve people’s lives as well as the nation at large. We’ve managed to top the education sector through the sincerity of our projects. Our innovations are things that are implementable. STEM is really not about academic subjects but the subjects should be practical to transform people’s lives and the economy as well as the country,” said Felix Moyo, at NUST.
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Plastic waste into fuel
VATIS UPDATE Part
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