clean cooking energy for india
TRANSCRIPT
Thre
e St
one
stov
es
Environment
Poverty
Family
Women and Children
Biomass Conservation
Climate Change
Drudgery
HealthSustainability
http://cleancookstoves.org/binary-data/RESOURCE/file/000/000/204-1.pdf
Government School Stoves
Gove
rnm
ent S
choo
l Sto
ves
LIVE DEMO
Heaps of fuel wood burnt – loss of biomass
PROSOPIS JULIFLORAMAIN SOURCE
FIRE
SMOKE
CHARCOAL
ASH
SMO
KE
SOOT
PART
ICU
LATE
MAT
TER
Types of stoves
GOOD STOVES
http://goodsto
ve.com
MAGH 3G STOVE
PRIMARY AIR (CONTROL OPTIONAL)
AIR FROM SIDES WITH FAN OR NATURAL DRAFT(SHUTTER TO CONTROL THE NATURAL DRAFT)
SECONDARY AIR
Stove Design by: Dr. N. Sai Bhaskar Reddy, CEO, GEO (April, 2010) http://www.goodstove.com
FUELSTICKSCHARCOALWOOD SHAVINGSSAW DUSTBRIQUETTESPELLETS
TLUD WOODGAS COMBUSTION CHAMBER OPTIONAL
SECONDARY AIR
PRIMARY AIR
FUELSTICKS /CHIPS OF WOOD /DRY LEAVES /HUSK
DETACHABLE STEEL GRATE & OPENING FOR REMOVING ASH (OPTIONAL)
PYROLYSIS ZONE
COVER LID (to control the excess primary air when fuel wood is less)
45 Deg.
OPTIONAL SECONDARY WOODGAS FRAME
3
6
5
1
2
4
8
GRAVITY FUELWOOD FEEDING SLOPE
7
AVAN STOVE
MAGH-1 WOODGAS STOVE
TWISTER WOODGAS STOVE
GOOD STOVE
Opening for air flowunderneath the sticks
Fuel wood
Base Platform
MAGH CM WOODGAS STOVE
MAG
H 3G
STO
VESecondary AirSide Air
Primary Air Side Air
KITCHEN LAB EXPERIMENTS
Good Stoves – Community participation in design and adaptation
Low-Cost Wood Gas Stoves designed with community participation
Good Stoves
“Good Stove” for the Primary school
OPEN HOUSE STOVE PLACE
Adoption of Good Stoves
GOOD STOVES ADOPTATION FACTORS
GOOD STOVES MUSEUM
Distribution of household cooking fuel use in India in 2005
Plants
Stoves
Biochar
Soil FertilityCarbon SequestrationEmission reductionWater conservation
EnergyEmissions reductionBiomass conservationBiochar as byproduct
Carbon as biocharWater and fertilizers conservationCarbon sequestration
Note: Presenter has designed low cost highly efficient 50 good stoves that produce biochar as a byproduct. http://goodstove.com Also see the book Understanding Stoves http://metameta.nl/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/Understanding-Stoves-okt-10-webversion.pdf
BIOCHAR PRODUCING STOVES
INCREASE IN YIELD AND PRODUCTION
CULTURAL
SPIRITUAL
BELIEFS
RITUALS
FESTIVALS
ALTARS
CREMATION
SOURCES (BIOMASS)
GOOD STOVES• TLUDs• Other
stoves
CROP RESIDUE
POULTRY LITTER
WASTE MANAGEMENT• Sludge
PRACTICES
FOOD PRESERVING
FOOD
CLEANING
MEDICINE
MATTRESS
TOOTH POWDER
AIR QUALITY• CO2 / CH4WATER
TREATMENT
AQUARIUM /
TERRARIUMS
BIOCHAR BRICKS
BIOCHAR
URINALS
SOAK PITS
FILTERING MEDIA
INSECT REPELLE
NT
SOIL AMENDMENT
INCREASED PRODUCTI
ONSOIL
TEMPERATURE
REGULATED
MOISTURE RETENTION
WATER CONSERVA
TION
NITROGEN /
PHOSPHOROUS
RETENTION
NURSERIESPESTICIDES ADBSORBTI
ON
SOIL MICROBES DENSITY
INCREASE
BIOCHAR COMPOST
EARTHWORMS
INCREASE
TERMITES / ANTS
REPULSION
CARBON SEQUESTRA
TION
ANIMALS
POULTRY - CH4
REDUCTION
LIVESTOCK - URINE AND
DUNG
FYM / COMPOST
BIOMASS
BIOCHAR
BIOCHARCULTURE
JAGGERYCOMPOST
BIOCHAR
SOIL MICROBES
GREEN MULCH
TEST PLOTS CONTROL BIOCHAR COMPOST
4 KGS 8 KGS 12 KGS
P R
E S
S
THANK YOU …
Book published by MetaMeta, Netherlands, August 2014
http://metameta.nl
http://goodstove.com