Opinion – Nigeria is experiencing a silent energy crisis.

About 95 million Nigerians depend on wood for their daily cooking.

Wood energy constitutes 90% of household energy use and today the demand for wood far outstrips supply, resulting in rising prices. Despite a national policy to promote a transition away from wood energy use, prospects remain bleak. Over 92% of Nigerians – approximately 130 million people live in poverty. Poverty and weak policies present a critical roadblock to fuel substitution.

According to the WHO, Nigeria has the highest rate of deaths attributable to solid fuel use, a staggering 79,000 deaths annually (mainly women and children) and 4% of the national burden of disease.

Though several socio-economic and political drivers of Nigeria’s poverty are well known, the role of energy in wealth creation has received less attention. However the fact remains that without access to sustainable energy, the global MDGs and the national seven point agenda of the president cannot be achieved.

The issue of energy poverty in Nigeria and Africa as a whole is not an intractable technical and economic challenge, but a political challenge. What is required is the will to realign governance structures and interests to address energy poverty and empower people to make choices that improve their lives.

The energy sector is ripe for a new wave of reforms. The benefits of 20 years of energy sector liberalization have bypassed the poor. Decentralization of energy governance, increased participation of women in energy sector decision-making and budget tracking of energy expenditure to ensure equitable allocation are needed. These elements of energy governance will deliver new opportunities for the poor and address key concerns such as poverty, deforestation and climate change.

Specific steps must be taken to address these issues. First, we can strengthen energy governance reforms by decentralizing energy governance from the federal government to local government levels with a focus on energy services important to the lives of poor people.

Secondly, we must engage the political process. Today, energy governance is sustained by vested interests. What is required is a move from analysis to advocacy, engagement and coalition building around the right to energy for human development.

Thirdly, we must pursue active market development for efficient wood stoves. This includes creation quality efficient woodstoves, increased promotion, financing and the development of policies that address the energy situation of the poor.

Finally, the role of international development agencies in making the energy sector serve the needs of the poor cannot be over emphasized. Strategies that can be employed include setting global energy access targets, where there is political commitment to reduce, by half the number of people dependent on traditional biomass energy within a decade. The development of energy rights and setting of access targets must begin in Nigeria.

In the interim, quick win areas for Nigeria include rapid scaling up of market development initiatives for the supply of improved efficient wood cooking stoves that reduces by 50% the deaths attributable to solid fuel use in households, address poverty and deforestation as well as provide a role for the poor in climate change mitigation. In that way, we will begin to address Nigeria’s silent energy crisis.

Adeola Ijeoma Eleri is with the International Centre for Energy, Environment & Development.

Source – http://allafrica.com/stories/201003250675.html

Source – HEDON, http://www.hedon.info

USAID – Evaluation of Wood Stoves in Dadaab Refugee Camps, Kenya. (pdf,6.86MB)

Feb. 2010

Berkeley Air Monitoring Group (Berkeley Air)

The purpose of this study was to obtain information on the potential suitability of a new generation of manufactured biomass cooking stoves for refugee and Internally Displaced Person (IDP) environments as well as disaster relief situations. Berkeley Air Monitoring Group (Berkeley Air) was asked to combine rigorous quantitative stove performance testing using the Controlled Cooking Test protocol with as much qualitative assessment of the acceptability and usability of each stove as feasible during a time-limited visit to a refugee camp designated by USAID. At USAID’s request, UNHCR agreed to host and facilitate the stove performance testing at the Dadaab refugee camp, located in northeastern Kenya.

Five manufactured stoves were selected to be tested in the Dadaab refugee settlements. They were:

  • Envirofit G-3300 Stove
  • StoveTec Wood Stove (26 cm)
  • Philips Natural Draft Stove
  • Save80 Stove
  • Vesto – The Variable Energy Stove

Twenty refugee women took part in the study – six or seven cooks in each settlement – to conduct a total of 214 Controlled Cooking Tests (CCTs). The CCT is one of three standardized cookstove testing protocols commonly used in the household energy field to evaluate and compare technologies. The CCT yields two main quantitative outputs: the amount of wood and time required to complete the task of cooking a standardized local meal, in this case rice with tomatoes, onions, and spices. The CCT was chosen as the basis of this study because it provides a standardized comparison of stove performance within the real-world parameters of local fuel, food, and cooking practices.

Conclusions

  • All five tested stoves outperformed the open fire, requiring significantly less fuel to cook the test meal. This result is not a foregone conclusion, as a skilled operator can cook very efficiently on an open fire.
  • The study’s strong consistent results demonstrate the quality of these five stoves and suggest it is likely that this performance differential would continue to be measurable across various operators and situations.
  • Fuel efficiency is not the sole determinant of user preferences. Ease of use, safety, level of smoke, and taste of food are also key factors in the choice, assuming all models are equally available and affordable.
  • None of these stoves offered noteworthy savings in cooking time.
  • Familiar stove technologies and designs may be more readily accepted by potential beneficiaries, and therefore easier to introduce in humanitarian situations, where time and security constraints may limit extensive training.
  • Technologies that require more behavior change on the part of the end user will also require more significant training on proper use than those that are more similar to current practices.
  • Addressing fuel requirements is critical to successful adoption as users are not necessarily willing or able to chop fuel to accommodate improved stove requirements.

MONGOLIA: ULAANBAATAR GRAPPLES WITH SMOG PROBLEM

Mongolia calls itself the land of blue sky, but for seven long months each year, a thick cloud of smog hangs over the capital, Ulaanbaatar. Seeking to improve the quality of life for the city’s approximately 1 million inhabitants, local bankers and development organizations are striving to combat pollution at its main source – suburban family homes.

From October to April each year, 60 percent of Ulaanbaatar‘s air pollution is generated by residents of the city’s sprawling ger districts, according to World Bank data. These residential areas on the outskirts of Ulaanbaatar are home to an estimated 150,000 households, with most living in traditional Mongolian gers, also known as yurts, and single-family homes that can resemble log cabins. These neighborhoods are not linked to the city’s central system that heats apartments and office buildings. Thus, most families in the ger districts burn a combination of wood and coal for heating and cooking. The poorest burn tires, trash, and whatever else they can find to stay warm during Mongolia’s frigid winters.

Coal-fired ger stoves release high levels of ash and other particulate matter (PM). When inhaled, these particles can settle in the lungs and respiratory tract and cause health problems. At two to 10 times above Mongolian and international air quality standards, Ulaanbaatar’s PM rates are among the worst in the world, according to a December 2009 World Bank report. The Asian Development Bank (ADB) estimates that health costs related to this air pollution account for as much as 4 percent of Mongolia’s GDP.

At the government’s urging, several major development organizations, including the World Bank and GTZ, the development arm of the German government, joined by Mongolian institutions, including micro-finance lender Xac Bank, have launched a project to improve ger stove designs. The aim is to make new stoves widely available, thereby reducing fuel consumption and emissions.

In the past, similar programs have met with mixed success. Some fuel-efficient stoves required specific fuel types; those fuels were often expensive or subject to unreliable availability. Others simply were not an improvement. “In 2006, 2007, there were not good stoves on the market,” says Ruth Erlbeck, GTZ’s Integrated Urban Development Program Manager.

GTZ developed a new ger stove model, which includes insulating bricks to retain heat – and thus use less fuel – and two air intake channels to raise the combustion temperature and cut emissions. The stoves can burn all types of fuel, even high quality semi-coke coal.

Last year, Xac Bank adopted the fifth generation of GTZ’s stove design for an eco-loan program. Xac Bank and GTZ claim that the stove cuts fuel use by more than 50 percent, although customer feedback indicates a less stellar performance, admits Matthew Kuzio, an American who works on the project in Xac Bank’s consumer banking department. “Most [customers] are saying it’s a 30 to 40 percent reduction of fuel,” he told EurasiaNet.org.

A traditional stove can use up 40 percent of a family’s monthly income in winter, according to Xac Bank estimates. Less fuel used means less spending. Even so, high consumer costs appear to be hindering the spread of the improved stoves, which cost 152,000 tugrik (approximately $110). GTZ’s Erlbeck suggested that many Mongolians cannot afford the new stoves.

“The people who are creating the mass of the pollution are [living] in poverty,” added Munkhbaatar Tsagaadai, a Xac Bank product officer.

Proponents of the fuel-efficient stoves are now searching for ways to improve distribution. Xac Bank maintains that its eco-loan borrowers who receive their loans and buy their stoves directly from bank branches save money from reduced fuel consumption, even while re-paying the loan.

The bank’s sales pitch does not focus on the environmental benefits. “We don’t even talk about the environment – just money and warmth,” says Kuzio.

But the environmental benefits nevertheless help the bank finance the program: Xac sells carbon credits based on stove sales on the voluntary carbon offset market via an American company called MicroEnergy Credits.

Only a few hundred families have obtained loans for the stoves, along with other eco-products, from Xac Bank since the lending program began last December. The bank and GTZ officials have opposing views on how to get enough stoves into Ulaanbaatar’s ger districts to make an environmental difference. GTZ’s Erlbeck says a subsidy program is necessary to cut consumer costs to reasonable levels; Xac Bank’s Kuzio argues that NGO programs often end before they become sustainable.

Despite the differences, both institutions are optimistic that progress can be made, in part because $30 million in Mongolia’s Millennium Challenge Account is earmarked for clean energy initiatives over the next three years. “We can solve the ger problem in two years if donors work together,” says Erlbeck. “The problem is manageable.”

The chances of success are greater if the people creating the problem start to see themselves as a viable part of the solution as well, says Gomb, a 76-year-old retired finance administrator. After purchasing a fuel-efficient stove with a Xac Bank eco-loan, he seemed pleased that his ger, located far from the city center, was warmer and less smoky. And he welcomed the fact that he was saving money on fuel. “Individuals need to be responsible for air pollution,” he said.

Source – http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/civilsociety/articles/eav022310a_pr.shtml

Boiling Point 58, April 2010

Using carbon finance to introduce LPG stoves into Northern Darfur, Sudan

Full-text: http://www.hedon.info/BP58:UsingCarbonFinanceToIntroduceLPGStovesIntoSudan

by Hashim Eltayeb

This project operates in El Fashir town, North Darfur, approximately 1,200 km west-southwest of Khartoum. The area suffers from desertification and drought, creating serious shortages of firewood. Conflict has contributed to energy shortages. The population comprises of 198,391 local residents and 29,645 internally displaced people, the majority of which earn a low income.

This project is providing modern Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) stoves to replace traditional three-stone fires, through carbon financing. The concept behind carbon finance is that individuals and companies in the industrialised world voluntarily fund greenhouse gas reductions in developing countries to compensate for their own climate change pollution. Carbon Clear Limited has provided support to enable poor households to afford the high upfront cost of LPG sets.

Supported by Practical Action, the programme is administered by local women’s legalised & registered groups – the project is carried out by the community for the community. Over 2,416 stoves have been disseminated, with positive results. Greenhouse gas emissions have been reduced, and reduced indoor air pollution is improving health and quality of life. It is contributing to environmental conservation by saving woodfuel; and to reducing the vulnerability that women face while collecting fuel wood outside of town.

From the PCIA website – http://www.pciaonline.org

USEPA Request for Applications, KPT Training

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, through a contract with Berkeley Air Monitoring Group, will provide three Partner organizations training and technical support to conduct a KPT study. Applications are due Monday, April 12, 2010, and should be submitted via e-mail to PCIA@epa.gov.

Please see attached PDF for more information including selection criteria and application submission instructions.
KPT_training_EPA_Announce.pdf

Where nightfall once meant only darkness in the tiny Tanzanian island of Tumbatu, now there are 200 points of light.

These solar panels are the product of a second career’s worth of vision and sweat by Mr Robert Lange,a retired Brandeis University physics professor who helps people put science to use in one of the poorest countries in southern Africa. 

Robert Lange

From a desk in his Cambridge apartment, Prof Lange runs a minuscule nonprofit that literally trades the dark smoke of a wood stove for the clean power of sunlight.

Prof Lange doesn’t give these panels away. He swaps them: Villages need to build and install four new simple but fuel-efficient cooking stoves to earn each solar unit.

The premise is that households are cutting their carbon emissions by using stoves that consume one-third less wood — and thus earn a solar installation. The units charge a small motorbike battery, which in turn can power a few low-power devices.

“We’re trying to set up an informal carbon credit market,’’ Prof Lange said. “We’re saying four stoves is worth about $130 in reduced emissions over eight or 10 years, and for 130 bucks we can buy and import a household-scale solar energy system, to give you lights, charge your cellphone, and run a radio.’’

The bottom line is that villagers get a few watts of electric power, saving them costly kerosene and wood, and giving them several more hours of nighttime light for reading and working. And the vented brick stoves save trees that would have gone into smoky indoor cooking fires.

Many nonprofit groups are working to improve the efficiency of wood-burning stoves, and the use of solar power in Africa has grown fitfully.

What’s especially innovative here is combining the two, with the goal of crafting an informal carbon trading market like the one envisioned globally to cut emissions and use more green energy.

Mr Mohammed, who says he is about 50, is coordinating the solar project in his Zanzibar community. “The villagers are now using very, very little amounts of kerosene,’’ he said.

Prof Lange is quick to point out that the idea wasn’t his own, but that of his friend and colleague of nearly 30 years, Mr Robert van Buskirk, another Harvard-trained physicist who pioneered the solar panels-for-stoves programme in Eritrea in the Horn of Africa.

Mr Van Buskirk, an energy-efficiency specialist with the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and now at the US Department of Energy, met Prof Lange in Cambridge, where he went to study physics at Harvard.

Both were working for left-wing causes from the Sandinistas in Nicaragua to Palestinian rights and the antiapartheid campaign.

And then each went on to turn talk into action in different corners of Africa: Mr van Buskirk in Eritrea and Prof Lange in Tanzania.

Prof Lange, who is now 72, came to Brandeis in 1965 after getting his PhD at Harvard and spending time in England as a postdoctoral fellow.

He earned tenure during his years teaching theoretical physics, then moved into the field of human vision. All the while, he said with his high-pitched laugh, “I was one of your basic campus lefty activists.’’

So he jumped at the chance to spend time in Africa and do more than protest. He came to Tanzania on a sabbatical in 1986-87, teaching at the University of Dar es Salaam. And he got hooked.

He met Mr Ali Ayoub Omar, now a math professor on the main Zanzibar Island, when he worked at a camp that Prof Lange cofounded in Zanzibar to expose young people to science and technology.

For seven years, he spent two months a year in Zanzibar running the camp with Omar, supported by the Rockefeller Foundation.

Prof Omar said that Mr Lange also collected and delivered basic scientific equipment to the 120 schools in Zanzibar. They also built wells, and helped set up the Zanzibar reptile zoo and environmental education center.

Mr Lange downplays the importance of his scientific background in his work with villagers in Tanzania.

“The physics is trivial,’’ Prof Lange said. Rather, it’s about sharing ideas and handing over responsibility. “I know how to work with people because I know how not to be in control.’’

Mr Van Buskirk and Prof Omar concur that Lange has been successful in Tanzania because he offers scientific expertise without imposing his ideas or making people dependent on him.

“Whenever he goes to a village, he doesn’t force anything on the people. The villages can decide whatever they want. If they turn down his proposal, then no problem,’’ said Prof Omar.

Mr Van Buskirk and Lange also are engaged in similar energy-efficiency initiatives in Ghana and Senegal.

The projects all share the basic premise of getting villagers to earn carbon credits, mainly by building more efficient cooking stoves: “The beautiful thing is it creates a currency for incrementally solving a global problem,’’ Mr van Buskirk said.

Prof Lange now wants to expand the stoves-for-solar experiment to Masai villages in northern Tanzania and southern Kenya.

The mud-and-dung Masai huts “have the worst indoor pollution than I have ever seen in the world,’’ Prof Lange said.

And people in remote Masai villages have to walk up to two hours to charge their cellphones in a region with few phone lines. So the combined prospect of less-smoky stoves and having light and phone chargers at home would be a welcome breakthrough.

Source – http://thecitizen.co.tz/business/14-international-business/825-african-villages-enjoy-clean-power

Kota Kinabalu: Difficulties faced by rural folk in getting cooking gas supply has inspired Universiti Malaysia Sabah (UMS) to create solar cookers as an alternative to traditional cooking methods. 

A batch of resourceful students at the university on Saturday tested a range of tools they designed for harnessing the heat from the sun to cook food.

“It may not be as good as cooking gas but this is free, using the heat of the sun to cook your meal,” said senior lecturer Dr Harry Chong Lye Hin to reporters at the compound of the UMS School of Science and Technology.

Chong said they hoped the solar cooker could be used in rural areas to help rural folk as an alternative cooking method.

“We are targeting for the solar cooker application to be utilised in rural areas such as Long Pasia, which is far away, where the people cannot buy cooking gas easily, ” he said.

Chong also hoped to develop the project so that it can be used as an education aid for school students as well as to expose them to the utilisation of solar energy.

“Now people talk about saving energy. It is good to have some proof to show the school students to cut down the cost of energy usage,” he said.

Seven groups consisting of 76 second year students of the Environmental Science programme performed an experiment of cooking fish using their own designed solar cookers under the sun.

Chong said the project which took seven weeks saw the students build their solar cooking utensils from recycled materials such as aluminium foil, papers, cardboard, old newspapers, stainless steel, plywood and a layer of glass, which were used to trap the heat.

He also said all the materials were also cheap costing only between RM5 and RM20.

“To start cooking, we need to ‘track’ the sun before turning the solar cookers directly towards the sun in order to be able to better concentrate and absorb the sun’s rays and towards the food until the food is cooked,” he said.

He said with solar cookers it would take only between four and five minutes to cook a fish, and for prawns and squid it much more faster, taking only took two to three minutes while it takes about eight to 10 minutes to boil an egg.

Source – http://www.dailyexpress.com.my/news.cfm?NewsID=71404

Black carbon”, the soot from billions of domestic fires across the poorer regions of the world, is a powerful, but little-publicized driver of climate change. Scientists now consider it provides around half the global warming potential of CO2.

In a unique marriage of high and low technologies Philippino engineer Alexis Belonio and US physicist Steve Garrett have come up with a way to improve the health of poor people, beat a major global waste problem and develop a fast-track technology to counter global warming.

Belonio is the inventor of the world’s most efficient gas cooker fuelled by waste rice husks, Garrett the genius behind the world’s first truly clean refrigerator, which is cooled using sound waves.

“Black carbon – which is basically the soot from billions of domestic cooking fires – is about 600 or 700 times more potent than CO2 as a climate warmer: It absorbs more heat because it is black,” Garrett explains. “But it only lasts about 10 days in the atmosphere, so this is a problem you can actually fix quite quickly – as opposed to CO2, which hangs around for centuries.”

If the smoky cooking fires of the developing world could be replaced with low-cost stoves like Belonio’s, which converts rice husks or other biomass to a clean gas, it would start to cut humanity’s carbon emissions within days. Developing countries would become world leaders in combating climate change.

The challenge is to develop a stove cheap and simple enough to go into a billion homes.

Belonio’s stove, now in its third generation, already fulfils most of the criteria. Fuelled by unwanted waste – the 150 million tonnes of husks discarded in rice-growing regions each year – his US$20 cooker turns this free, low-energy fuel into a greenhouse-neutral gas that burns with a clear blue flame. This can save a poor family up to one-tenth of their income every year, as they no longer need to buy gas or kerosene for cooking. Because it burns cleanly, the stove is much healthier to use: the World Health Organization estimates that indoor air pollution caused by smoky fires kills about 1.6 million women and children every year.

Key to the efficiency of the stove is a small electric fan that drives a stream of air through the smouldering rice husks. This produces the gas mixture which the stove then burns, just like a normal gas cooker. The catch is that you need electricity to drive the fan – and half the developing world still lacks this essential energy source.

Enter Steve Garrett of the Pennsylvania State University, who had been working as Scientific Adviser to the U.S. State Department’s South-East Asia bureau. “We were looking for technologies that would assist development, clean up the environment, address global warming and improve health,” he explains. It turned out the Philippino engineer and American physicist had a strong link – both were Laureates of the Rolex Awards for Enterprise. Steve, who became a Laureate in 1993, learned of Belonio’s work when the latter won his award in 2008.

The stroke of genius was the realisation by Garrett that he had a way to turn the heat from Belonio’s stove into sound waves that could in turn be used to produce enough electricity to run the fan. This meant the stove could be used anywhere on Earth where there was a suitable biomass fuel supply – and act as its own electrical power source.

Steven Garrett, 60, specializes in the science of thermo-acoustics. The winner of several major prizes for environmental technology and the holder of over 20 patents for his inventions, he has developed sound-driven refrigerators for the U.S. space program, U.S. Navy and Ben & Jerry’s ice cream, with a view to one day replacing the billions of ‘dirty’ refrigerators and air conditioners worldwide which use either ozone-destroying CFCs or planet-warming HCFCs as coolants . His research group now works on commercial chillers and freezers, including appropriate technology for developing countries. These use electricity to make high-intensity sound waves to compress a clean, inert gas, to initiate the cooling cycle used in refrigeration.

Alexis Belonio, 49, is animated by the ideal of sharing his stove with anyone in the world who wants it. “It is God’s calling,” he says simply. “I have received the knowledge of this stove from God for free, and I must give it for free also.” So far, more than 40 companies, non-governmental organizations, aid agencies and local groups in a dozen countries have adopted his design. With his Rolex Award funding, he has published a technical manual, distributed information via the Internet and run the first of a series of workshops in the Philippines to train the trainers who will distribute his technology far and wide. Belonio himself works with Minang Jordanindo Approtech in Indonesia, who are making 80 stoves a week, and plans to assist similar operations in Vietnam and Cambodia, in addition to his native Philippines. Inquiries are pouring in from countries such as India and China, as well as South-East Asia.

Belonio is now working on his Phase 3 model stove. In this model, a container of rice husks is loaded into the stove and burned until used up, then exchanged for another, like swapping the bottles on a gas barbecue. The aim, he explains, is to make the rice cooker available in towns and villages where rice is not produced locally. This will create jobs for workers in rice areas who will gather the unwanted rice husks and pack them into fuel containers. It will also greatly increase the places the stove can be used – and provide a new, low-cost cooking fuel for urban families. The ash from the burned husks can be mixed into the soil, where its ability to hold moisture results in crop yields 10 to 20 per cent higher.

But what could spread the stove worldwide would be the addition of its own power source. Garrett points out: “Take a look on the internet at the dark areas of the planet at night. These are the places where there is no electricity, where people burn biomass to cook or warm their homes. That is where most of the black carbon comes from. In Asia, unlike the developed world, one half of the global warming potential is due to black carbon and other products of incomplete combustion such as methane, carbon monoxide and ozone precursors.

“It is also a big deal using a simple stove to put electricity into people’s lives in areas that may never be on the grid. They can also use it to charge a battery to light their home, or to power a cell phone.”

Working from the meticulous detail that Belonio has publicized, Garrett says it is possible to convert heat to sound, and sound to electricity, in essence reversing the process used in his acoustically-powered fridge. “All you need is 2-3 watts to run the stove’s fan and a few watts more to run other devices. We would like to use the stove’s heat to generate sound waves and use that sound in a linear alternator – a sort of highly efficient microphone – to make electricity.”

There are other ways to turn stove heat into electricity, he adds – using thermoelectric methods or co-generation of steam to run a micro-turbine. They all need to be explored.

Belonio is apprehensive about the possible cost of the upgraded stove. He has struggled for years to design the cheapest, most practical stove possible, which can be made in an ordinary village workshop from scrap metal and is affordable to the poorest of the poor. He has got the price down to $20-$25 a unit, and is worried about the added cost that a high-tech power source might involve. “I’m dealing with the household sector,” he says. “They want to save their money.”

Garrett adds that it is possible to produce electricity thermoacoustically with inexpensive components. If it can be shown to work successfully and also fixes the black carbon issue, governments and aid agencies will be very interested in providing funding to make the stove affordable for worldwide distribution, possibly offsetting part of the additional cost with carbon credits. He is offering the state-of-the art instrumentation of his lab at Penn State to assist Belonio in designing the most efficient and cost-effective small-scale electrical generator possible that will work with his stove.

The teeming mind of Alexis Belonio never rests. He is well advanced in the design of a super-burner that produces a far hotter flame by injecting steam. This could be used to provide boilers and dryers for small industry, fire kilns and bakery ovens or generate electricity from waste on a scale ranging from a single household to one megawatt.
Garrett adds: “The world needs technologies that will help economic development, improve people’s health, clean up the environment, and address global warming. This partnership looks to us like a win-win-win-win situation. That’s the upside.

“The big challenge is, you need to do it a billion times,” he admits. “We have to get this technology out to 3 billion people who are burning biomass, more than half of whom have no access to electricity. The challenges of low-cost manufacturing, distribution, adoption, and marketing seem more daunting to me than the technological challenges.” He is already drawing up a technology roadmap to persuade governments to get behind the plan to put to put clean, self-powered, fuel-efficient stoves in hundreds of millions of homes.

The two Laureates met to discuss their new concept at a conference in Bangkok in mid-November 2009, where tests on seven low-polluting stoves found that Belonio’s stove had the lowest black carbon emissions of all.

If it works as well as they hope, the combination of Belonio’s simple but elegantly efficient stove and Garrett’s brilliant thermoacoustic technology could begin to help cool the planet by removing a major warming agent – black carbon – within a decade.

Source – http://www.sciencealert.com.au/features/20101803-20731.html

Black carbon soot, produced from incomplete combustion of diesel fuel and biomass, is one of the largest contributors to climate change apart from CO2 and should be a prime target of policymakers according to scientists and experts testifying at today’s hearing of the US House Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming chaired by Congressman Edward Markey.

“Black carbon packs a powerful punch when it comes to climate change, absorbing solar radiation while in the atmosphere and also darkening the surfaces of snow and ice, contributing to increased melting in vulnerable regions such as the Arctic and Himalayas,” said Durwood Zaelke, President of the Institute for Governance & Sustainable Development (IGSD). “The good news is that it only stays in the atmosphere for up to a few weeks, making it an ideal target for achieving fast cooling through aggressive mitigation measures.”

Reducing black carbon emissions and other short-term climate forcers such as HFCs, methane, and tropospheric ozone can serve as a complement to CO2 reduction measures, which can take up to 1,000 years to produce significant cooling because of CO2’s long atmospheric lifetime.

“A drastic reduction in BC has the potential of offsetting CO2-induced warming for a decade or two. Effectively, BC reduction may provide a possible mechanism for buying time to develop and implement effective steps for reducing CO2 emissions,” said Dr V. Ramanathan from Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California, San Diego, in his written testimony.

Because developed countries have been successful in reducing black carbon emissions in recent years, the technology exists to help developing countries, such as China and India, significantly cut their soot emissions, through diesel-particulate filters for vehicles and cleaner-burning cookstoves.

Dr Ramanathan has spearheaded the Project Surya programme to bring solar cookstoves to India to assist in gathering additional data on the climate forcing potential of black carbon and its impact on local health – emissions of black carbon contribute to respiratory illness, the fourth leading cause of excess mortality in developing countries.

Installing particulate filters in current and new fleets of diesel vehicles in the US is also an important strategy; filters can cut particulate emissions by up to 90 percent. “We already have the technologies needed to achieve deep reductions,” said Chairman Markey in his opening statement. “Developing and installing technologies would create jobs and move us forward in the clean energy economy.”

“Policymakers are beginning to take note of black carbon and other short-term climate forcers like HFCs, methane, and tropospheric ozone, where emissions reductions are cost-effective and can yield major climate and health benefits,” added Zaelke. “These ‘fast-action’ strategies are low-hanging fruits that need to be picked now to avoid the dangerous near-term consequences of abrupt climate change.”

Source – ClickGreen.org

Cooking Practices and Cookstoves Field Insights: A Pilot Study of User Experience with Traditional and Improved Cookstoves, November 2009. (pdf, full-text)

Revati Dhoble, Sreyamsa Bairiganjan. Institute for Financial Management and Research Centre for Development Finance

Traditional cookstoves are used extensively across rural households in India. The use of traditional cookstoves corresponds directly to the free access and easy availability of cooking fuels such as firewood, cow dung, leaves, twigs etc. The development community across the globe comprising of governments, NGOs, civil societies and individual companies have been designing improved cookstoves to help reduce the pressure on forest resources, reduce the time spent collecting cooking fuel, decrease families’ exposure to indoor air pollution and reduce climate forcing emissions. Despite all the concerted efforts across the public, private, and NGO sectors, improved cookstoves have not seen widespread adoption across rural India, the reasons for this non-adoption being multifold. This paper is the result of a field research undertaken across five states in India over a period of two months. The first part of the study aims to develop an understanding of traditional cooking practices with regard to fuel and cooking technology. It also aims to capture the social and cultural activities that take place before, during, and after cooking across India. The second part of the study looks at some of the improved cookstoves currently in the market and assesses the user experience surrounding the use of these improved cookstoves. The findings of the study will be helpful in understanding the household level dynamics of cooking which can lead to designing stoves with more acceptability.