The Charcoal Project

Of Pretty Women, the cleanness of clean cookstoves, and the sysiphian pursuit of financial promises

When it comes to “clean cookstoves,” to paraphrase a former US president, “it depends what your definition of the word “clean” is…

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Unsustainable woodfuel consumption and public health

Researchers warn that East African plants that could cure malaria could disappear before scientists have a chance to study them.

A new book by scientists at the World Agroforestry Centre, “Common Antimalarial Trees and Shrubs of East Africa,” identifies 22 tree and shrub species that traditional healers in East Africa use to fight the disease.

But, the researchers say, they are being cut down for cooking fuel and other uses and could disappear before scientists have a chance to study them.

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Photo essay: Of Haiti, charcoal, and energy poverty

We’ve focused before on Haiti‘s complete dependence on charcoal as a primary fuel and the impact this has had on the country’s environment.

The UK newspaper The Guardian recently ran a slideshow of powerful photos depicting aspects of the country’s charcoal trade.

The images are a profound reminder of the link between poverty, energy needs, and the environment.

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NEWS: The case for combining water treatment & clean cookstoves

From WASHupdate: Combined Household Water Treatment and Indoor Air Pollution Projects in Urban Mambanda, Cameroon and Rural Nyanza, Kenya, 2011– WHO.

The positive experience from these two projects concerning the apparently clear benefits of delivering household water treatment and household energy interventions in an integrated way has important implications for future programs. Specifically, the key strategic question is whether integrated delivery should be the norm, rather than, as at present, the exception and only seen in a few innovative projects.

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