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Cookstoves are a hot topic

by: mental_masala

Sun Dec 27, 2009 at 09:43:08 AM PST


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(Important and well researched piece. I have seen firsthand the effects of poor cooking stoves in India.   - promoted by Asinus Asinum Fricat)

Woman and cookstoves in MadagascarIf you were to list the top causes of death and sickness in the developing world, cooking would probably be in the top tier (I'd guess that lack of clean water is at the top). In villages and cities across the world, millions cook their food while engulfed in plumes of toxic gases and particulate matter (smoke and soot). Women and children bear the brunt of these toxins: women most often do the cooking and children are often nearby. The source of these toxins is the fire that is burning wood, kerosene, dung, or another material underneath their cooking pots. In addition, gathering the fuel can be risky business, exposing the gatherer to bandits and other nefarious people. One study (PDF) estimates that there are 1.6 million premature deaths and 3.6% of the global burden of disease due to indoor air pollution caused by the use of solid fuels.

This toxic burden has been receiving a lot of attention recently, including a long article in the December 21 & 28 issue of The New Yorker. When the issue arrived a few days ago, I made my usual scan of the table of contents to see what was inside. "A stove to transform the developing world"— the subtitle of an article called “Hearth Surgery” by Burkhard Bilger — caught my eye because I've long had an interest in domestic combustion devices.* So excited was I to see such an august publication covering something as humble as the cookstove that I immediately turned to the article and started reading.

In the first paragraph, I saw the name "Dale Andreatta" and just about fell over. Dale, it turns out, was one of my research colleagues during graduate school in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at the University of California, Berkeley. Even back then Dale had an interest in using engineering to solve difficult problems of the developing world. One project that I remember was solar water pasteurization with low-cost materials — some black trash bags, some sand, a hose, and a temperature switch.** I helped out on a few occasions, but at that time in my life I hadn't yet picked up experimental skills (I was into numerical modeling, the serious experimental work would come a few years later).

mental_masala :: Cookstoves are a hot topic

The Engineering Challenge

The New Yorker article (abstract only, subscription required for full text) picks up the story of cookstoves at "Stove Camp," an annual event in Cottage Grove, Oregon at the Aprovecho Research Center. There, dozens of engineers, designers and others get together to tackle the technical problems of stove design and manufacturing. For example, how can a stove be designed so that Ethiopians can reliably cook their staple injera (a flat-bread/crepe made with fermented teff batter)? Cooking regional cuisines right is critical because if a stove doesn’t work for the end user, it will probably be discarded.

"The world is absolutely littered with failed stoves," says Dean Still, the head of Aprovecho. And for good reason: "Building a stove is simple. Building a good stove is hard. Building a good cheap stove can drive an engineer crazy," writes Bilger. The designer has to contend with a variety of inputs (small twigs, big sticks, wood chips, paper scraps, all with varying levels of moisture), a variety of conditions, and much more. And then, a perfect design can be foiled by slight adjustments. Bilger comments on this: "Too many stoves start out as marvels of efficiency, they said, and are gradually modified into obsolescence. Once the engineer is gone, the local builder may widen the stove's mouth so it can burn larger sticks, only to draw in too much cold air. Or he'll make the stove out of denser bricks, not realizing that the air pockets in the clay are its best insulation. The better the stove, the tighter its tolerances, the easier it is to ruin."

In recent years, Aprovecho has been collaborating with a manufacturing company in China to mass-produce stoves on a huge scale and with extremely high quality. In recognition of the current and past work, the groups won the Ashden Award for sustainable energy. This page as Aprovecho’s website has a short video about their new mass-produced cookstoves.

And, of course, cost is a major concern. In the article, Dean Still cites a retail price of $10 per stove as a target (this cost also assumes a lifetime for the stove, which wasn’t given in the article. A stove that lasts two years should cost much less than one that lasts five years.)

Later in the article, the author travels to Guatemala to visit what is probably the world's most comprehensive study of the effects of cookstoves on human health. The project leader is Professor Kirk Smith, Professor of Public Health at UC Berkeley, who has devoted much of his career to the problem of air pollution from cookstoves. Homes are outfitted with chemical sensors and villagers are given weekly medical examinations to help the researchers understand more about the health impacts of cooking.

The Global Impact

Although the human damage caused by cookstoves has been getting attention for decades from the public health community, non-profits and international development organizations, cookstoves’ role in climate change has brought them out of the haze and into the news. Although stove fires emit the main greenhouse gas (carbon dioxide, CO2), their smoke is the concern. Solid fuel fires emit a complicated mixture of particulate matter (PM). The darkest portion of this PM (the part known as “black carbon,” a sooty material that is nearly pure carbon) can cause warming in several ways, including these two: 1) when suspended in the atmosphere, it absorbs sunlight and causes local atmospheric heating; 2) when it settles on snow or ice, it increases the melting rate of the snow or ice (by reducing its reflectivity). Researchers are finding that black carbon’s climate influence had been underestimated previously. Many have suggested that control of black carbon and other agents with short atmospheric lifetimes (like methane) can slow climate change in the near term while we figure out what to do about CO2 (a commentary in the Sacramento Bee explains, as does an article in the L.A. Times).

The second effect is especially important to Asia because glaciers in the Himalayas are the source of fresh water for millions on the continent. Slow-melting glaciers act as storage units, keeping the winter’s precipitation ‘on ice’ and slowly releasing it during the warm season. Already, we are seeing changes in the glaciers on the Tibetan Plateau, as new research from NASA shows.

It is unfortunate that the cookstove health crisis has festered for so long, killing and injuring millions, but perhaps the global focus on climate change will finally bring the resources and know-how to clear out the smoke that damages the world’s poorest and most vulnerable.

Additional Coverage of Cookstoves

More coverage of cookstoves can be found at these links:

  • A collection of links to information about cookstoves can be found at Professor Tami Bond's website at the University of Illinois or on Professor Kirk Smith's website at UC Berkeley.
  • Professor Veerabhadran Ramanathan from UC San Diego is leading Project Surya, which aims to reduce black carbon emissions in rural India, partially through introduction of more efficient stoves. Sustainable Futures has coverage of Ramanathan's talk at the American Geophysical Union conference in San Francisco a few weeks ago.
  • The Australian: “India’s killer cookers a recipe for disaster”
  • Worldwatch Institute has news about a new program in India
  • PBS Newshour has a story (transcript and video) about black carbon and cooking fires in India
  • Wired Science talks with Professor Ramanathan about his black carbon work
  • A video from KQED’s Quest program examines a project at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory to build a better stove for the Darfur refugee camps, a place where gathering wood can be very dangerous.
  • The Lancet has a technical article examining how much mortality and disease could be avoided through distribution of 15 million improved stoves a year around India for 10 years. The authors estimate that the program would reduce premature deaths by more than 17%, while also reducing emission of climate-change-inducing black carbon.


Photo of stoves in Soavinarivo, Madagascar from glowingz's flickr collection, subject to a Creative Commons License.


* Water heaters, industrial gas burners, and so on.

** The method of killing pathogens in water involved the following steps: In a sunny location, build a mesa-like platform using the sand, then hollow out the middle to make a well. Lay one sheet of plastic over the well and fill with water. Attach temperature switch to the hose, place hose in water. Cover water with another sheet of plastic. Given enough sun, the water will eventually reach temperatures that kill pathogens (given enough time – the hotter the water, the less time is required. Somewhere there is a table that shows the relationship but I don’t know where that is).


Cross posted at Mental Masala.

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Solar Cookers International (4.00 / 2)
is a nonprofit I've been donating to for a while.  http://solarcookers.org/  They have various projects in various places including refugee camps, and also use local people to help teach how to use solar cooking for cooking as well as making water safe.

Solar cookers are definitely important (0.00 / 0)
You're right, solar cookers have an important role to play (including in the industrialized world, in places like the Sun Belt). The Project Surya web page, for example, has a parabolic solar cooker as the most prominent technology on the front page (to be sure, it looks much more interesting than a wood-fired cooker).  

[ Parent ]
Black carbon, particulate matter, and agriculture (0.00 / 0)
A primer on black carbon from the Pew Center on Climate Change reminds me that clouds of particulate matter also cause reduced agricultural yields by reducing the amount of sunlight that reaches the ground. I neglected to mention this in my post above.  Here's something from the primer (references in parentheses are listed in the primer, of course):

Several studies (e.g., Chameides et al., 1999) estimated that the reduction in sunlight from regional "dimming" from soot, sulfate, and other particles in Asia might diminish crop yields by about 10 percent or more. As noted above, however, the combined effects of dimming and heating by particles also may have substantial effects on rainfall and evaporation, which may offset or amplify the reduction in sunlight (UNEP, 2008). One study did examine the combined effect of these factors on the monsoon season rice crop in India and found that both GHGs and black carbon, as well as other particles, may have contributed to the slow down in harvest growth that has been observed since 1985 (Aufhammer et al., 2006).


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