Cleaner Hearths, Better Homes : New Stoves for India and the Developing World

For people in developed countries, burning fuel wood in an open hearth evokes nostalgia and romance. But in developing countries, the harsh reality is that several billion people, mainly women and children, face long hours collecting fuel wood, which is burned inefficiently in traditional biomass stoves. The smoke emitted into their homes exposes them to pollution levels 10-20 times higher than the maximum standards considered safe in developed countries. And the problem is not out of the ordinary. The majority of people in developing countries at present cannot afford the transition to modern fuels. Today, close to one half of the world's people still depend on biomass energy to meet their cooking and heating needs. This book should be of interest to policymakers and scientists across a broad spectrum of disciplines from health, environment, and economics to sociology, anthropology, and physics. Indeed, the hands of many specialists are required to ensure successful stove programs, which call for social marketing, stove engineering, development of standards, promotion of private and commercial enterprises, and appropriate subsidy schemes. That the book's authors represent diverse disciplines sociology, physics, and forest economics underscores the range of perspectives needed to tackle the issues involved in the commercial promotion of improved stoves. The impetus for writing this book started at the end of a World Bank project on the health implications of indoor air pollution, which coincided with the Government of India's (GoI) cancellation of its 20-year program on improved stoves. The government's decision came as no surprise, given the program's mixed results.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Barnes, Douglas F., Kumar, Priti, Openshaw, Keith
Language:English
Published: New Delhi: Oxford University Press and World Bank 2012
Subjects:ACUTE RESPIRATORY ILLNESS, AGRICULTURAL RESIDUE, AIR, AIR POLLUTION, ANIMAL DUNG, APPLIANCES, APPROACH, ASH, ATMOSPHERE, AVAILABILITY, BIOGAS, BIOGAS PLANTS, BIOMASS, BIOMASS COLLECTION, BIOMASS COMBUSTION, BIOMASS ENERGY, BIOMASS ENERGY USE, BIOMASS FUEL, BIOMASS FUEL USE, BIOMASS FUELS, BIOMASS PRODUCTION, BIOMASS RESOURCES, BIOMASS SMOKE, BIOMASS SOURCE, BIOMASS STOVE, BIOMASS STOVES, BIOMASS USE, BIOMASS USERS, BLACK CARBON, BURNING BIOMASS, BURNING FUEL, BURNING STOVES, CANCER, CARBON DIOXIDE, CARBON DIOXIDE EMISSIONS, CEMENT, CHARCOAL, CHRONIC RESPIRATORY DISEASE, CLEAN FUELS, CLIMATE, CLIMATE CHANGE, CO, COAL, COLORS, COMBUSTION, COMBUSTION EMISSIONS, COMMERCIAL ENTERPRISES, CONCENTRATES, CONSERVATION, CONVENTIONAL ENERGY, COOKING, COOKING FUELS, COW DUNG, CROP, CROP RESIDUE, CROP RESIDUES, DEFORESTATION, ECONOMIC GROWTH, EFFICIENT STOVES, ELECTRICITY, EMISSION, EMISSION REDUCTIONS, EMPLOYMENT, ENERGY CRISES, ENERGY CRISIS, ENERGY DEVELOPMENT, ENERGY EFFICIENCY, ENERGY NEEDS, ENERGY OFFICES, ENERGY PLANNING, ENERGY RESEARCH, ENERGY SAVINGS, ENERGY SECTOR, ENERGY SOURCE, ENERGY SOURCES, ENERGY USE, ENERGY USERS, ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS, ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERNS, ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH, ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH, FINE PARTICULATES, FOREST, FOREST ECONOMICS, FORESTRY, FORESTS, FUEL, FUEL COLLECTION, FUEL COMBUSTION, FUEL CONSUMPTION, FUEL COSTS, FUEL EFFICIENCY, FUEL SUBSTITUTION, FUEL SUPPLIES, FUEL TYPE, FUEL TYPES, FUEL USE, FUEL WOOD, FUELWOOD, GAS, GASES, GASIFIER, GENERATION, GLOBAL WARMING, GLOBAL WARMING POTENTIAL, GREENHOUSE, GREENHOUSE GAS, GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS, HEALTH RISK, HEAT, HEATING, HEATING ENERGY, HEATING SYSTEMS, HOUSEHOLD ENERGY, HOUSEHOLD ENERGY USE, HOUSEHOLD FUEL, HOUSEHOLD FUELS, HUMAN HEALTH, HYDROGEN, IMPROVING ENERGY EFFICIENCY, INCOME, INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY, INTERNATIONAL FORESTRY RESEARCH, KEROSENE, LIQUEFIED PETROLEUM GAS, LIQUID FUELS, LIVING SPACE, LPG, METHANE, MODERN FUELS, NITROUS OXIDE, ORGANIC CARBON, OXYGEN, PARTICLES, PARTICULATE, PARTICULATE MATTER, PARTICULATES, PETROLEUM, PETROLEUM GAS, PHYSICS, PM10, POLLUTION, POLLUTION LEVELS, POWER, POWER PLANT, PP, PRIMARY ENERGY, RAINFALL, RAW MATERIALS, RENEWABLE ENERGY, RURAL AREAS, RURAL ENERGY, RURAL ENERGY PLANNING, RURAL ENERGY USE, RURAL HOUSEHOLDS, SAFETY STANDARDS, SMOKE, SOLID FUELS, SUGARCANE, SUGARCANE RESIDUES, SUNLIGHT, SUSTAINABLE ENERGY, TEMPERATURE, THERMAL EFFICIENCY, TIN, TONS OF CARBON, TRADITIONAL BIOMASS, TRADITIONAL STOVE, TRADITIONAL STOVES, USE OF BIOMASS, VESSELS, VILLAGE LEVEL, WATER CONSERVATION, WIND, WOOD,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2012/04/16248106/cleaner-hearths-better-homes-new-stoves-india-developing-world
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/9366
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!