454a Renewable Energy Technologies: Corona Discharges in Water Contaminated with Oil Spillage

Chinyere P., Mbachu, Chemical Engineering, Tennessee Technological University, 1020 Stadium Drive Prescott Hall, P.O.Box 5013, Cookeville, TN 38505

Poverty is generally considered as a major cause of food insecurity and poverty alleviation is essential in improving access to food. The Niger Delta of Nigeria, one of the world's top oil producers, has been the center of violent despair, neglect, poverty & poor environment for years.

86 percent of the population, majority of women and children, live in rural communities and work at subsistence farming. They cannot afford a good education for their children due to their low income levels. Depletion in natural water and lack of development in the oil rich region has led to disintegration of these traditional communities. Renewable energy technologies as a profitable alternative venture is a veritable tool that can help provide food and jobs for teeming youth and women. The coastal communities has remarkable potentials for development, but the government as well as the multinationals have not understood and tapped the potential role of renewable energy technologies in managing the crisis in the Nigeria.

This focuses on the understanding and further developing of pulsed corona discharges in water decontaminants (such as oil spillage decontamination).