14 Apr 2009
A box designed to improve the efficiency of using firewood to boil water in developing countries won $75,000 in funding from sustainable development charity Forum for the Future last week.
The Kyoto Box - which costs about €5 to make - uses a greenhouse effect to boil 10 litres of water in two hours, far more efficient than a standard fire.
Kenya-based entrepreneur Jon Bøhmer of startup Kyoto Energy said the box is targeted at the three billion people who use firewood to cook and has the potential to deliver huge environmental and social benefits.
"We’re saving lives and saving trees," he said. "I doubt if there is any other technology that can make so much impact for so little money."
The design consists of two boxes, one inside the other, with an acrylic cover that absorbs and traps the sun's heat. Black paint on the inner box and silver foil on the outer help concentrate the heat while a layer of straw or newspaper between the two provides insulation.
Bøhmer has developed a more robust, longer-lasting cooker in corrugated plastic, which can be mass-produced in existing factories as cheaply as the cardboard prototype, and he intends to produce 10,000 to use in trials in ten countries, including India, Indonesia, South Africa, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Mozambique and Liberia.
He believes the box will halve the need for firewood, saving an estimated two tonnes of carbon per family per year.
The trials will generate data to back an application for carbon credits, the crucial element which will make the project worthwhile financially as the scheme is a commercial one and the boxes will be sold.
Profits will be used to fund production of a suite of other products which offer solar-powered solutions for villagers in the developing world: a torch; a plastic bag which heats and cleans water; and a smokeless cooker which burns biomass.
LATEST STORIES ABOUT TECHNOLOGY
YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
LATEST JOBS
TODAY'S TOP STORIES
HIGHLIGHT
The best green companies in the UK should be preparing their entries for annual BusinessGreen Leaders Awards
INSIGHT
INSIGHT
The science and practical application of an improved method for the specification of power and cooling infrastructure for data centres
A look at alternative approaches to managing energy for cost and/or sustainability reasons in data centres
WHAT DO YOU THINK? Add your comment
Carbon Emissions Credits?
I think it is a very good device that could help people. Only drawback: it does not work at night :) Also, I am wondering how it will be possible to be elligible for carbon credits from European Union. Having been trading carbon and knowing a bit EAUs, CERs legislative background, I am just wondering how this would be possible
Posted by Kevin, 22 Apr 2009