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PRIVACY
Manufacturing

Bath organisation ships hand-cranked washing machines to refugee camps in Iraq

The Washing Machine Project has received support from the regional business community

Hand-cranked washing machines made by The Washing Machine Project.(Image: The Washing Machine Project)

Bristol-based chamber of commerce Business West has helped a company founded at the University of Bath to ship hand-cranked washing machines to refugee camps in Iraq.

Engineering graduate Navjot Sawhney has created a machine made from wood and plastic that allows people living in poverty and without access to electricity to dramatically reduce the amount of time cleaning their clothes.

Mr Sawhney was inspired to start The Washing Machine Project in 2018 while volunteering in India, when he saw a woman living in the village he was staying in struggling to hand wash clothes.

The Washing Machine Project is now working with humanitarian charity Care International with the aim of delivering 7,500 of Mr Sawhney’s machines to communities in Kenya, Lebanon, and India.

Navjot Sawhney, founder of The Washing Machine Project(Image: The Washing Machine Project)

The venture has received free support from the business community in the South West of England, including from Bristol design company Huxlo, who have made the parts for the machine.

Business West was also able to assist with the exporting of the first batch of 30 machines to northern Iraq last month.

The chamber was approached by The Washing Machine Project as the company was struggling to complete a certificate of origin, an important international trade document which identifies the origin of the goods being exported.

Mr Sawhney, a former cost engineer at Dyson’s campus in Malmesbury in Wiltshire, said Business West was able to provide the assistance they needed at “very short notice”.