
Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.
A company in Zambia is assembling bicycle frames made of sustainable bamboo for sale in the United States. Reporter Jo Fidgen has the story.
You can find more information on the bamboo bicycles in this BBC article, and on the Zambikes website.
Read the Transcript
This text below is a phonetic transcript of a radio story broadcast by PRI’s THE WORLD. It has been created on deadline by a contractor for PRI. The transcript is included here to facilitate internet searches for audio content. Please report any transcribing errors to theworld@pri.org. This transcript may not be in its final form, and it may be updated. Please be aware that the authoritative record of material distributed by PRI’s THE WORLD is the program audio.
KATY CLARK: Many African countries export the raw materials needed to manufacture goods in the West, but a company in Zambia is assembling a product that may have a big market in these environmentally conscious times. We’re talking about bicycle frames made of sustainable bamboo. The company is making the frames for sale in the United States. Reporter Jo Fidgen has the details from Lusaka.
JO FIDGEN: Bamboo several meters high being hacked down in a field outside Lusaka. Next year, these stalks of the super-grass could be in the United States, being ridden to work. They’re destined to become a bamboosero – a bicycle with a bamboo frame.
DIVILANCE MACHILIKA: At the moment, we are sanding the bamboo bike. It’s important to sand the bamboo to get the correct shape of the bike.
FIDGEN: Divilance Machilika is Operations Coordinator at Zambikes, which develops hard-wearing bicycles suited to Zambia’s bumpy road. The bamboo bike is the latest addition to its catalogue.
MACHILIKA: First thing, we cut the bamboos locally, and then we soak them in bamboo stabilizer and then we put them on the jug to get the frame, and then we tie the frame together with sisal which is natural string – together with epoxy, which is glue.
FIDGEN: Add conventional metal handlebars, fork and wheels, Machilika says, and you’ve got the complete Bamboosero. Vaughn Spethmann test-rides a prototype. He set up Zambikes two years ago with a fellow Californian and two Zambians. Spethmann says bamboo is cheaper and more environmentally friendly than conventional bike-making materials, but that it’s still extremely strong and durable.
VAUGHN SPETHMANN: Bamboo is so great for bikes because when you’re going on long rides and the terrain is tough, bamboo has shown that it’s a shock absorber so you actually have a smoother ride. And it doesn’t cost a lot in Zambia, it grows like crazy. Zambia is a country that imports from the developed world like crazy. Zambia is a country that imports from the developed world like crazy, so to send something out that is Zambian-made of Zambian materials is a huge thing for Zambia as a whole.
FIDGEN: Zambikes co-founder Mwewa Chikamba talks me through the orders coming in through the company’s website. It seems customers in the US and elsewhere aren’t put off by a price tag of nearly $500 dollars for a bamboo frame and $900 for a completed bike.
MWEWA CHIKAMBA: People buying the bamboo bikes are excited: they’re getting something from a third-world country going into the first world. And secondly, they’re getting something grown naturally, you don’t have to get all this steel. We are using the returns to train the unskilled labor force we have.
FIDGEN: Adding to the cost are the difficulties of doing business in Zambia.
CHIKAMBA: We have a problem, firstly, with bureaucracy. It’s not easy to get things done out here. And of course we have very high taxes. Getting capital and raw materials is not that easy.
FIDGEN: The company has trained its staff, currently 45 strong and growing. And encouraged them with interest-free loans to buy bikes to set up their own businesses. Some, like Divilance Machilika, have boosted their income at the weekend, transporting eggs, charcoal, and other goods for sale in the city.
MACHILIKA: I was just working in the farms – manual work. But this time, my life has changed. I’m learning a lot here. I’m running my own business. Last year, I planted maize and this year I’m selling it, which is awesome. I can support my family, my wife. Life is better.
FIDGEN: Meanwhile, in the workshop, Divilance and his colleagues continue to sand and cut the bamboo into shape. If they succeed in putting Zambian bikes on American roads, they’ll be reinventing the country’s business model, if not the wheel. For The World, I’m Jo Fidgen, Lusaka, Zambia.
Copyright ©2009 PRI’s THE WORLD. All rights reserved. No quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media without attribution to PRI’s THE WORLD. This transcript may not be reproduced, in whole or in part, without prior written permission. For further information, please email The World’s Permissions Coordinator at theworld@pri.org.
Discussion
6 comments for “Zambia’s Bamboo bicycles”