ABOUT THE SPEAKER
William Kamkwamba - Inventor
To power his family's home, young William Kamkwamba built an electricity-producing windmill from spare parts and scrap -- starting him on a journey detailed in the book and film "The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind."

Why you should listen

William Kamkwamba, from Malawi, is a born inventor. When he was 14, he built an electricity-producing windmill from spare parts and scrap, working from rough plans he found in a library book called Using Energy and modifying them to fit his needs. The windmill he built powers four lights and two radios in his family home.

After reading about Kamkwamba on Mike McKay's blog Hactivate (which picked up the story from a local Malawi newspaper), TEDGlobal Conference Director Emeka Okafor spent several weeks tracking him down at his home in Masitala Village, Wimbe, and invited him to attend TEDGlobal on a fellowship. Onstage, Kamkwamba talked about his invention and shared his dreams: to build a larger windmill to help with irrigation for his entire village, and to go back to school.

Following Kamkwamba's moving talk, there was an outpouring of support for him and his promising work. Members of the TED community got together to help him improve his power system (by incorporating solar energy), and further his education through school and mentorships. Subsequent projects have included clean water, malaria prevention, solar power and lighting for the six homes in his family compound; a deep-water well with a solar-powered pump for clean water; and a drip irrigation system. Kamkwamba himself returned to school, and is now attending the African Leadership Academy, a new pan-African prep school outside Johannesburg, South Africa.

Kamkwamba's story is documented in his autobiography, The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind: Creating Currents of Electricity and Hope. A  documentary about Kamkwamba, called William and the Windmill, won the Documentary Feature Grand Jury award at SXSW in 2013 (watch a trailer ). You can support his work and other young inventors at MovingWindmills.org.


More profile about the speaker
William Kamkwamba | Speaker | TED.com
TEDGlobal 2007

William Kamkwamba: How I built a windmill

William Kamkwamba über den Bau eines Windrads

Filmed:
2,952,899 views

Mit nur 14 Jahren baute William Kamkwamba aus Malawi für seine Familie ein Strom erzeugendes Windrad aus Restteilen und groben Plänen, die er in einem Buch aus der Bibliothek fand.
- Inventor
To power his family's home, young William Kamkwamba built an electricity-producing windmill from spare parts and scrap -- starting him on a journey detailed in the book and film "The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind." Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:29
ChrisChris AndersonAnderson: WilliamWilliam, hiHallo. Good to see you.
0
4000
2000
Chris Anderson: Hallo William. Es ist schön dich zu sehen.
00:31
WilliamWilliam KamkwambaKamkwamba: ThanksVielen Dank.
1
6000
1000
William Kamkwamba: Danke.
00:32
CACA: So, we'vewir haben got a pictureBild, I think? Where is this?
2
7000
5000
CA: Also, ich glaube wir haben ein Bild? Wo ist das?
00:37
WKWK: This is my home. This is where I liveLeben.
3
12000
4000
WK: Das ist mein Zuhause. Da lebe ich.
00:41
CACA: Where? What countryLand?
4
16000
2000
CA: Wo? Welches Land?
00:43
WKWK: In MalawiMalawi, KasunguKasungu. In KasunguKasungu. Yeah, MalaMala.
5
18000
3000
WK: In Malawi, Kasungu. In Kasungu. Ja. Mala.
00:46
CACA: OK. Now, you're 19 now?
6
21000
3000
CA: OK. Jetzt bist Du 19 Jahre alt?
00:49
WKWK: Yeah. I'm 19 yearsJahre now.
7
24000
2000
WK: Ja. Ich bin jetzt 19.
00:51
CACA: FiveFünf yearsJahre agovor you had an ideaIdee. What was that?
8
26000
3000
CA: Vor fünf Jahren hattest Du eine Idee. Welche?
00:54
WKWK: I wanted to make a windmillWindmühle.
9
29000
2000
WK: Ich möchte ein Windrad machen.
00:56
CACA: A windmillWindmühle?
10
31000
1000
CA: Ein Windrad?
00:57
WKWK: Yeah.
11
32000
1000
WK: Ja.
00:58
CACA: What, to powerLeistung -- for lightingBeleuchtung and stuffSachen?
12
33000
4000
CA: Also - was - um anzutreiben - für Beleuchtung und so?
01:02
WKWK: Yeah.
13
37000
2000
WK: Ja.
01:04
CACA: So what did you do? How did you realizerealisieren that?
14
39000
3000
WK: Nachdem ich die Schule abgebrochen hatte, ging ich in die Bibliothek,
01:07
WKWK: After I droppedfallen gelassen out of schoolSchule, I wentging to libraryBibliothek,
15
42000
4000
WK: Nachdem ich mit der Schule aufgehört hatte, ging ich in die Bibliothek,
01:11
and I readlesen a bookBuch that would -- "UsingMit Hilfe EnergyEnergie,"
16
46000
4000
und las ein Buch -- "Verwendung von Energie,"
01:15
and I get informationInformation about doing the millMühle.
17
50000
3000
und fand Information über das Bauen eines Windrads.
01:18
And I triedversucht, and I madegemacht it.
18
53000
2000
Und ich versuchte es und schaffte es.
01:20
(ApplauseApplaus)
19
55000
10000
( Applaus )
01:30
CACA: So you copiedkopiert -- you exactlygenau copiedkopiert the designEntwurf in the bookBuch.
20
65000
4000
CA: Also du hast -- das exakte Design aus dem Buch kopiert.
01:34
WKWK: AhAch, no. I just --
21
69000
2000
WK: Ah, nein. Ich habe nur --
01:36
CACA: What happenedpassiert?
22
71000
2000
CA: Was ist passiert?
01:38
WKWK: In factTatsache, a designEntwurf of the windmillWindmühle that was in the bookBuch,
23
73000
4000
WK: Eigentlich, das Design vom Windrad im Buch,
01:42
it has got fourvier -- ahAh -- threedrei bladesKlingen,
24
77000
4000
hatte vier -- ah -- drei Flügel,
01:46
and mineBergwerk has got fourvier bladesKlingen.
25
81000
3000
meines hat vier Flügel.
01:49
CACA: The bookBuch had threedrei, yoursdeine had fourvier.
26
84000
2000
CA: Das Buch hatte drei, deines hatte vier.
01:51
WKWK: Yeah.
27
86000
1000
WK: Ja.
01:52
CACA: And you madegemacht it out of what?
28
87000
2000
CA: Und woraus hast du es gemacht?
01:54
WKWK: I madegemacht fourvier bladesKlingen, just because I want to increaseerhöhen, ansteigen powerLeistung.
29
89000
5000
WK: Ich habe vier Flügel gemacht, weil ich die Leistung erhöhen wollte.
01:59
CACA: OK.
30
94000
1000
CA: OK.
02:00
WKWK: Yeah.
31
95000
1000
WK: Ja.
02:01
CACA: You testedgeprüft threedrei, and foundgefunden that fourvier workedhat funktioniert better?
32
96000
2000
CA: Du hast drei getestet und herausgefunden, dass vier besser sind?
02:03
WKWK: Yeah. I testTest.
33
98000
2000
WK: Ja, ich habe getestet.
02:05
CACA: And what did you make the windmillWindmühle out of?
34
100000
3000
CA: Und aus was hast du das Windrad gemacht?
02:08
What materialsMaterialien did you use?
35
103000
2000
Welche Materialien hast Du verwendet?
02:10
WKWK: I use a bicycleFahrrad frameRahmen, and a pulleyRiemenscheibe, and plasticKunststoff pipeRohr, what then pullszieht --
36
105000
6000
WK: Ich habe einen Fahrradrahmen, einen Flaschenzug, ein Plastikrohr verwendet, welches dann zieht --
02:16
CACA: Do we have a pictureBild of that? Can we have the nextNächster slidegleiten?
37
111000
3000
CA: Haben wir ein Bild davon? Können wir die nächste Folie haben?
02:19
WKWK: Yeah. The windmillWindmühle.
38
114000
2000
WK: Ja. Das Windrad.
02:21
CACA: And so, and that windmillWindmühle, what -- it workedhat funktioniert?
39
116000
4000
CA: Also, und dieses Windrad -- funktioniert es?
02:25
WKWK: When the windWind blowsSchläge, it rotatesdreht sich and generateserzeugt.
40
120000
5000
WK: Wenn der Wind weht dreht es sich und erzeugt.
02:30
CACA: How much electricityElektrizität?
41
125000
1000
CA: Wieviel Strom?
02:31
WKWK: 12 wattsWatt.
42
126000
2000
WK: 12 Watt.
02:33
CACA: And so, that litzündete a lightLicht for the houseHaus? How manyviele lightsBeleuchtung?
43
128000
5000
CA: Und so hattet ihr Licht im Haus? Wieviele Lichter?
02:38
WKWK: FourVier bulbsGlühbirnen and two radiosFunkgeräte.
44
133000
2000
WK: Vier Glühbirnen und zwei Radios.
02:40
CACA: WowWow.
45
135000
1000
CA: Wow.
02:41
WKWK: Yeah.
46
136000
1000
WK: Ja.
02:42
(ApplauseApplaus) CACA: NextNächste slidegleiten --
47
137000
10000
CA: Also-- (Applaus) -- nächste Folie --
02:52
so who'swer ist that?
48
147000
2000
wer sind diese Leute?
02:54
WKWK: This is my parentsEltern, holdingHalten the radioRadio.
49
149000
3000
WK: Das sind meine Eltern, nach dem Kauf des Radios.
02:57
CACA: So what did they make of -- that you were 14, 15 at the time --
50
152000
4000
CA: Und was halten sie davon -- das du 14, 15 zu dieser Zeit warst --
03:01
what did they make of this? They were impressedbeeindruckt?
51
156000
3000
was halten sie davon? Sind sie beeindruckt?
03:04
WKWK: Yeah.
52
159000
1000
WK: Ja.
03:05
CACA: And so what's your -- what are you going to do with this?
53
160000
2000
CA: Und was -- was hast du jetzt vor?
03:07
WKWK: UmUmm --
54
162000
2000
WK: Ähm --
03:09
CACA: What do you -- I mean -- do you want to buildbauen anotherein anderer one?
55
164000
4000
CA: Was wirst du -- ich meine -- wirst du noch eines bauen?
03:13
WKWK: Yeah, I want to buildbauen anotherein anderer one --
56
168000
3000
WK: Ja, ich will noch eines bauen --
03:16
to pumpPumpe waterWasser and irrigationBewässerung for cropsPflanzen.
57
171000
5000
um Wasser zu pumpen und die Pflanzen zu bewässern.
03:21
CACA: So this one would have to be biggergrößer?
58
176000
2000
CA: Diesmal wird es also größer sein?
03:23
WKWK: Yeah.
59
178000
1000
WK: Ja.
03:24
CACA: How biggroß?
60
179000
1000
CA: Wie groß?
03:25
WKWK: I think it will produceproduzieren more than 20 the wattsWatt.
61
180000
5000
WK: Ich denke, es wird mehr als 20 Watt erzeugen.
03:31
CACA: So that would produceproduzieren irrigationBewässerung for the entireganz villageDorf?
62
186000
4000
CA: Es würde das ganze Dorf bewässern?
03:35
WKWK: Yeah.
63
190000
2000
WK: Ja.
03:37
CACA: WowWow. And so you're talkingim Gespräch to people here at TEDTED
64
192000
3000
CA: Wow. Und du sprichst zu den Leuten hier bei TED
03:40
to get people who mightMacht be ablefähig to help in some way
65
195000
4000
um Leute zu finden die vielleicht in der Lage sind irgendwie zu helfen --
03:44
to realizerealisieren this dreamTraum?
66
199000
2000
um diesen Traum zu realisieren?
03:46
WKWK: Yeah, if they can help me with materialsMaterialien, yeah.
67
201000
4000
WK: Ja, falls sie mir helfen können -- mit Material, ja.
03:50
CACA: And as you think of your life going forwardVorwärts-,
68
205000
3000
CA: Und wenn du an deine Zukunft denkst,
03:53
you're 19 now,
69
208000
3000
Du bist jetzt 19, siehst du --
03:56
do you pictureBild continuingauch weiterhin with this dreamTraum of workingArbeiten in energyEnergie?
70
211000
4000
siehst du dich dabei diesen Traum fortzusetzen, mit Energie zu arbeiten?
04:00
WKWK: Yeah. I'm still thinkingDenken to work on energyEnergie.
71
215000
5000
WK: Ja. Ich denke immer noch daran, mit Energie zu arbeiten.
04:05
CACA: WowWow. WilliamWilliam, it's a realecht honorEhre to have you at the TEDTED conferenceKonferenz.
72
220000
4000
CA: Wow. William, es ist wirklich eine Ehre, dich hier bei der TED-Konferenz zu haben.
04:09
Thank you so much for comingKommen.
73
224000
2000
Danke vielmals fürs Kommen.
04:11
WKWK: Thank you.
74
226000
2000
WK: Danke.
04:13
(ApplauseApplaus)
75
228000
5000
(Applaus)
Translated by Baahar Y
Reviewed by Matthias J. Déjà

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
William Kamkwamba - Inventor
To power his family's home, young William Kamkwamba built an electricity-producing windmill from spare parts and scrap -- starting him on a journey detailed in the book and film "The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind."

Why you should listen

William Kamkwamba, from Malawi, is a born inventor. When he was 14, he built an electricity-producing windmill from spare parts and scrap, working from rough plans he found in a library book called Using Energy and modifying them to fit his needs. The windmill he built powers four lights and two radios in his family home.

After reading about Kamkwamba on Mike McKay's blog Hactivate (which picked up the story from a local Malawi newspaper), TEDGlobal Conference Director Emeka Okafor spent several weeks tracking him down at his home in Masitala Village, Wimbe, and invited him to attend TEDGlobal on a fellowship. Onstage, Kamkwamba talked about his invention and shared his dreams: to build a larger windmill to help with irrigation for his entire village, and to go back to school.

Following Kamkwamba's moving talk, there was an outpouring of support for him and his promising work. Members of the TED community got together to help him improve his power system (by incorporating solar energy), and further his education through school and mentorships. Subsequent projects have included clean water, malaria prevention, solar power and lighting for the six homes in his family compound; a deep-water well with a solar-powered pump for clean water; and a drip irrigation system. Kamkwamba himself returned to school, and is now attending the African Leadership Academy, a new pan-African prep school outside Johannesburg, South Africa.

Kamkwamba's story is documented in his autobiography, The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind: Creating Currents of Electricity and Hope. A  documentary about Kamkwamba, called William and the Windmill, won the Documentary Feature Grand Jury award at SXSW in 2013 (watch a trailer ). You can support his work and other young inventors at MovingWindmills.org.


More profile about the speaker
William Kamkwamba | Speaker | TED.com