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Stove Group Draft Goals and Objectives. Goal: To assist our community partners in reducing deforestation, promoting environmental health and improving quality of life in Ethiopia.Objectives:1) Identify alternative, efficient cook stoves.Portfolio of stoves, bio-digesters (and composting outho
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1. Preliminary Assessment Alternative Stoves Options for a Green Awassa Daniel Baker, Juan Merino and Alison Murphy
3/6/06
2. Stove Group Draft Goals and Objectives Goal: To assist our community partners in reducing deforestation, promoting environmental health and improving quality of life in Ethiopia.
Objectives:
1) Identify alternative, efficient cook stoves.
Portfolio of stoves, bio-digesters (and composting outhouses)
2) Document barriers to adoption/best practices for adoption
3) Identify grants that fund cook stove projects
4) Identify alternative methods
5) Gather history of stove use and projects (interview process)
6) Participate in the ateliers
7) Conduct preliminary ecological economic cost/benefit analysis
8) Write up project findings
3. Traditional Cooking Methods “Cooking injera Ethiopia’s staple flat bread is one of the most inefficient forms of energy use in the world”
-Mike Bess
Energy for Sustainable Development (ESD)
Designers of the Mitre Stove
4. Injera Baking injera accounts for 80% of energy consumption in households.
Just to make injera, the average Ethiopian family burns 20 kgs of wood.
Because injera is such a large part of their diet, any alternative cooking method must take into account its unique requirements
6. Criteria for a Successful Stove Must be able to heat up quickly and to a high temperature
Must accommodate the large ceramic plate on which injera is cooked
Be more appealing than current stoves
Reduce burns
Reduce smoke inhalation
7. Some advantages of open-fire (aka 3 stone) stoves
8. Alternative Stove Options Stoves options considered by
Function
Only stoves intended for HH Food Production considered here
Portable or Stationary
Fuel Type
Emissions and Waste Products
Degree of complexity in manufacture
Locally produced or imported
Cost
Up front
Operating
Fuel Efficiency
Replacement Parts
Evidence of overall affordability
History of use and appeal
9. Solid Fuel Stoves Wood
Charcoal
Agricultural Waste and By-Products
Other Biomass
10. Lorena Stoves Household Food Production
Stationary
Fuel Type: Wood
Emissions and Waste Products
Degree of complexity in manufacture
Locally produced or imported
Cost
Up front
Operating
Fuel Efficiency
Reduced due to heat loss through stove mass
Reduced through poor fire-to-pot interface
Replacement Parts
Evidence of overall affordability
History of use and appeal
Developed in Guatemala. Design published in 1979.
Modified in many ways and many countries
11. The Plancha Household Cooking Stove
Stationary with chimney
Wood Fuel
Emissions
Reduced indoor air particulates compared to open fires
Locally Produced
Steel imported
All other materials and labor local
Cost
$100 to $150
Too high for most rural families: often subsidized by NGO
Fuel efficiency not significantly better, and may be worse, than open fire in traditional plancha design. Addition of baffle reduced wood use to 39% less than open fire.
Cooking time is no better, and may be worse, than open fires
Developed over past 20 years. New designs introduced in 1995.
A version of the Lorena?
Supported by NGO’s
12. Rocket Stove Household Cookstove
Semi-Portable
Fuel Type: Wood (other?)
Emissions -
Emissions reduction from improved combustion
Locally Produced
Ceramic stove
Cost (Honduras) is $8 to produce, sold for $10
Can be made from a variety of materials, including scavenged
Operating Efficiency?
Insulated firebox (= insulated chimney?)
Good fire-to-pot interface
Without skirt about as efficient as a open fire
With skirt, efficiency greatly increased
Rocket-type stoves are used world-wide
Popularity and Appeal –
Certainly very popular when measured in terms of dispersion of design and innovation
Used in 20 countries over past 13 years
13. Examples of Rocket Stoves
14. Estufa Justo Stove Combines some design features from La Plancha and the Rocket Stoves
Household Stove
Stationary
Wood Fuel
Emissions
Chimney stove
Thin metal griddle may/may not have holes for pots
Degree of complexity in manufacture
Locally produced or imported
Cost
Aprovecho claims material cost to build is $25-$35.
Operating
Fuel Efficiency
Insulated Stove body
Can be increased by design modifications
E.g. open pot holes, gasketed pot holes, narrower griddle
25-50% increase in efficiency compared to Lorena
Replacement Parts
Evidence of overall affordability
History of use and appeal
Part of the evolution of Latin American alternative stove designs
Open holes for pots increases efficiency but soot may conflict with cultural preferences
15. Estufo Justo Stove
16. Kenya Ceramic Jiko Stove Household Use
Portable
Charcoal Fuel
Fabricated and distributed by same artisans who produce traditional stoves
Cost (1989) from $2.50 to $15.00
Variations on design have efficiencies of 36% to 45%.
Other variations have been made for Ethiopia, the “Laketch”, which saves 20% in fuel compared to traditional
Supported by World Bank and National Government Programs
E.g. 600,000 stoves in Kenya
Similar stoves in Rwanda, Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda, Ethiopia
20,000 Laketch stoves in Ethiopia
A variation (?) in Rwanda, the Rondereza, widely adopted (25% of HH in capital adopted within 3 years
17. Mirte Stoves Function
HH Stove specific for injera
Semi-portable
Multi-Fuel
Multi-Fuel (wood, sawdust,
coffee husks. No dung)
Efficiency
Mirte stoves reduce household biomass
consumption by 50%.
Built locally/Job Creating
Local Materials
sand or volcanic pumice mixed with cement
Standard production through use of steel molds
Production can be scaled up or down
Local artisans or larger scale facilities
Up front cost
They cost about US$5 to produce
History
Developed in the mid-90’s from a combined effort between the World Band and the Ministry of Mines and Energy. Later funding from British DFID
Two years after mitre stoves were introduced, 100% of the stoves used for large-scale food production were still being used.
Nearly 50,000 stoves have been sold since mid-1995.
Commercial production of these stoves employs almost 100 people in Ethiopia.
18. Eritrea ERTC StoveAshden Award Winner
19. Solar Cookstoves A wide variety of types and designs:
20. Biogas Biodigesters
21. Biogas Digesters Household Food Production
Most common at larger scales
Need 6 cows per small digester (FAO)
Reduced emissions compared to wood fuel
Polyethylene bag must be purchased
Payback periods may be too long
Some cultural objections to use of human excrement
Reported to be more enjoyable to cook with gas compared to wood
Utility varies with food being cooked
Better for rapid, short-time foods
Better heat control compared to wood
22. Preliminary Ideas for Evaluation of Alternative Stove Options Financial Costs
Up Front
Operating
Payback Periods
Economic Impact
Job Creation
Direct
Indirect
Ecological Impact
Direct
Fuel Type & Use
Fuel Efficiency
Indirect
Cultural Reception
Ease of use/learning
Similarity to existing practices
Cooking quality
Dependency/Vulnerability
Local Manufacture
Imported materials needed
Gender Impact
Equity Impact
History / Empirical Confidence
Institutional Analysis
23. Next Presentation Factors for success or failure in stove projects
Measuring Impact & Evaluating Alternatives
Funding Options
Grants
Credit Options