Bangladesh Introduces Improved Stove To Save Fuel
BANGLADESH: April 14, 2008
DHAKA - Bangladesh has introduced an improved cooking stove that will
consume 50 percent less of the biomass used for cooking in rural areas, a
senior official said on Sunday.
"About 95 percent of Bangladesh, with 145 million people, uses traditional
fuels like cow dung, agricultural wastage and wood totalling 60 million
tonnes most inefficiently, worth 100 billion taka ($1.46 billion)," said
Erich Otto Gomm, programme coordinator in Bangladesh of German Technical
Cooperation (GTZ).
The ministry of Power, Energy and Mineral Resources, with the financial and
technical assistance of the German Federal Ministry of Economic Cooperation
and Development, through GTZ, introduced an environmentally friendly stove
that also saves biomass by more than 50 percent, he said.
"Poorly ventilated clay stoves that produce smoke, carbon monoxide and
carcinogens pose a serious health threat to women and children," Erich told
a news conference.
He said that according to the World Health Organization, 46,000 women and
children in Bangladesh die each year, while millions more suffer from
respiratory, tuberculosis and cardiovascular diseases and lung cancer due to
the "killer in the kitchen".
"Biomass is also becoming increasingly scarce and costly, putting pressure
on the farmers to use more chemical fertiliser instead of bio-fertiliser,"
said Khaleq Uzzaman, senior adviser of Sustainable Energy for Development (SED).
The SED launched a countrywide programme to popularise the improved cooking
stoves developed by the state-run Bangladesh Council of Scientific and
Industrial Research and later modified by the GTZ.
Khaleq said so far 35,000 stoves have been sold and installed across the
country and now up to 10,000 were being built every month.
"Our aim is to build 1 million stoves over the next three years," he said,
and hoped to have one in every rural Bangladeshi home by the end of 2018.
Currently, only 6 percent of the population has access to natural gas,
primarily in urban areas, he told reporters.
(US$1=68.58 taka)
(Reporting by Serajul Islam Quadir; Writing by Anis Ahmed, editing by Will
Waterman)
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