Cookstoves and climate change

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Clean Cookstoves and Climate Change Photo Credit: Michael Benanav save lives | improve livelihoods | empower women | combat climate change Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves The Impacts of Climate Change Climate change is a critical challenge facing humanity. According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, rising global temperatures will very likely increase the frequency and intensity of heat waves, droughts and heavy rainfall events, adversely affecting agriculture, forests, water resources, industry, human health and settlements. These events will impact many people around the world – disproportionately affecting the poor in developing countries. Inefficient Cooking Contributes to Climate Change For nearly 3 billion people each day cooking is conducted on open fires or rudimentary cookstoves that are fueled by coal or solid biomass such as wood. Searching for and using solid biomass puts women and children’s safety at risk; depletes forests, which can weaken soil causing mudslides and destroying agricultural land; and jeopardizes human health and household and community air quality through toxic smoke emissions. Burning solid biomass is inefficient at converting energy to heat for cooking, and releases a toxic mix of health- damaging pollutants that contribute to climate change at regional and global levels. In particular, some of these pollutants, such as black carbon and methane, have short life spans but significant consequences for the climate. Black carbon, which results from incomplete combustion, is estimated to contribute the equivalent of 25 to 50 per cent of CO2 warming globally. Methane emissions are the second largest cause of climate change after carbon dioxide. It is clear that inefficient household energy use has adverse consequences for the environment, air quality and human health. Clean Cookstoves Can Help Address Climate Change In addition to the health and economic empowerment benefits associated with their use, clean cookstoves and fuels can also lead to a more sustainable and cleaner environment. If appropriately designed and disseminated, clean cookstoves can reduce a large share of emissions from cooking with biomass. These reductions also bring other ben- efits, such as reduced indoor and outdoor pollution, less pressure on forests, and economic and time savings due to the reduced need to search for or purchase costly fuels. Since they have short life spans – a few days for black carbon, a decade for methane – reducing these gases would bring about a more rapid climate response than reductions in CO2 alone. Photo Credit: Michael Benanav

Transcript of Cookstoves and climate change

Page 1: Cookstoves and climate change

Clean Cookstoves and Climate Change

Photo Credit: Michael Benanav

save lives | improve livelihoods | empower women | combat climate changeGlobal Alliance for Clean Cookstoves

The Impacts of Climate Change

Climate change is a critical challenge facing humanity. According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change,

rising global temperatures will very likely increase the frequency and intensity of heat waves, droughts and heavy

rainfall events, adversely affecting agriculture, forests, water resources, industry, human health and settlements.

These events will impact many people around the world – disproportionately affecting the poor in developing

countries.

Inefficient Cooking Contributes to Climate Change

For nearly 3 billion people each day cooking is conducted on open fires or rudimentary cookstoves that are fueled by

coal or solid biomass such as wood. Searching for and using solid biomass puts women and children’s safety at risk;

depletes forests, which can weaken soil causing mudslides and destroying agricultural land; and jeopardizes human

health and household and community air quality through toxic smoke emissions.

Burning solid biomass is inefficient at converting energy to heat for cooking, and releases a toxic mix of health-

damaging pollutants that contribute to climate change at regional and global levels. In particular, some of these

pollutants, such as black carbon and methane, have short life spans but significant consequences for the climate.

Black carbon, which results from incomplete combustion, is estimated to contribute the equivalent of 25 to 50 per

cent of CO2 warming globally. Methane emissions are the second largest cause of climate change after carbon

dioxide. It is clear that inefficient household energy use has adverse consequences for the environment, air quality

and human health.

Clean Cookstoves Can Help Address Climate Change

In addition to the health and economic empowerment benefits associated with their use, clean cookstoves and fuels

can also lead to a more sustainable and cleaner environment. If appropriately designed and disseminated, clean

cookstoves can reduce a large share of emissions from cooking with biomass. These reductions also bring other ben-

efits, such as reduced indoor and outdoor pollution, less pressure on forests, and economic and time savings due

to the reduced need to search for or purchase costly fuels. Since they have short life spans – a few days for black

carbon, a decade for methane – reducing these gases would bring about a more rapid climate response than

reductions in CO2 alone.

Photo Credit: Michael Benanav

Page 2: Cookstoves and climate change

save lives | improve livelihoods | empower women | combat climate changeGlobal Alliance for Clean Cookstoves

Photo Credit: Erin Patrick, Women’s Refugee Commission

Inefficient household energy use has adverse consequences for the environment, air quality and human health

Residential Uses Produce More than a Quarter of All Black Carbon Emissions

It is estimated that universal adoption of advanced biomass cookstoves could have an impact equivalent

to reducing CO2 emissions by about 25–50 percent. In a series of recent reports, the United Nations

Environment Programme emphasized the importance of introducing clean-burning biomass cookstoves and

substituting traditional cookstoves with those that use modern fuels in order to mitigate climate change

and improve air quality.

The Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves

The Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves is an innovative public-private partnership led by the United

Nations Foundation to save lives, improve livelihoods, empower women, and combat climate change by

creat¬ing a thriving global market for clean and efficient household cook¬ing solutions. The Alliance’s 100

by ’20 goal calls for 100 million households to adopt clean and efficient stoves and fuels by 2020. The

Alliance is working with public, private, and non-profit partners to help overcome the market barriers that

currently impede the production, deployment, and use of clean cookstoves in the developing world.

Part of the Alliance’s ongoing efforts to transform the sector for clean cookstoves and fuels was to solicit

information from a range of global experts across multiple disciplines. This led to the formation of nine

Working Groups and two Cross Cutting Committees, including the formation of a Climate Research

Working Group, which in part emphasized the importance of robust carbon markets to maximize

emission reductions and facilitate clean cookstove dissemination.

For more information: Email: [email protected]

Phone:

Facebook:Twitter:+1 202 650 5345

Web: www.CleanCookstoves.org

www.facebook.com/Cookstoves

www.twitter.com/Cookstoves