Stand at the rim of Quechuyuc Muyu, peer down at the central terraced monument of…

Renewable green technology for Peru’s high Altiplano people
[Originally published July 21, 2012] Every year, freezing temperatures wreck havoc in the southern Altiplano regions of Cusco, Huancavelica and Puno, claiming the lives of hundreds of children and elderly people.


An article in El Comercio’s Sunday magazine Somos last week highlighted field work that the university is doing to drastically improve living conditions with a few renewable energy tweaks.
The project is called K’OñICHUYAWASI, Quechua for “warm, clean house,” and focuses on three renewable green technologies: a solar “Trombe” wall, roof insulation and improved kitchens hearths.
The initiative has been slowly spreading in the highlands of Cusco, Puno and Huancavelica with funding from PUCP through its Social Responsibility Academic Board, and organizations like Christadelphian Meal a Day Fund of the Americas (CDMsDFA), the International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent, and the Starbucks Foundation. The have retrofitted more than 100 homes, 10 rural health clinics and 10 schools, benefiting more than 1500 people who live above of 4,000 meters.

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