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Energy: Clean stoves already in use in rural India
Sudhir Kumar
Nature
491
,
333
(15 November 2012)
doi:10.1038/491333b
Published online
14 November 2012
The health and pollution problems caused by primitive heating stoves (
Nature
490
,
343
;
2012
) are already being addressed in one rural Indian community.
In the state of Arunachal Pradesh in the eastern Himalayas — a biodiversity hot spot (
N. Myers
et al
.
Nature
403
,
853
–
858
;
2000
) — most people use biomass fuel as their primary source of energy. It is burnt in a safe, energy-efficient and smoke-free stove called a
chulha
.
This portable iron stove is enclosed, equipped with a heat-intensity control, an ash-collection tray and an exhaust pipe. It costs just 1,500–3,000 rupees (US
$
28–56), and has a thermal efficiency of 60
%
, compared with 6–8
%
for traditional stoves. This translates into a significant saving of around 300 kilograms of wood fuel (biomass) equivalent per year (
J. S. Rawat
et al
.
Curr. Sci.
98
,
1554
;
2010
).
These improvements have proved to be a boon for rural women living in poor socio-economic conditions.
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