By: Muhammmad Abbas Khan
No I Don’t agree India and Pakistan can live without electricity also But don’t sold their bodies on the name of energy there are many other sources is south with a new blessing of climate change we...
View ArticleBy: Caroline
This is a classic example of how the gender division of labour in the home, and the invisibility of women’s role in care work, leads to a key issue for them – and ironically for children too, while...
View ArticleBy: Emily
Designing and marketing clean, efficient cookstoves that people actually want to use is indeed a hard task, but there are some success stories. Experience tells us that development practitioners trying...
View ArticleBy: Hilke
This might sound like a really dumb question (and I don’t propose it as a solution as the problem is more complex), but besides the rainy season: Why don’t people suffering from the smoke, cook on a...
View ArticleBy: Ian Bray
Hi Hilke Good question. When I first encountered this issue it puzzle me as well. “For very practical reasons people usually do not cook outside. In the dry season it’s too hot, in the rainy season it...
View ArticleBy: Sam Gardner
When I was working with improved stoves, now years ago, the acceptance was good, as long as the project subsidized. We tried to work with gas stoves instead, and there was enthusiasm. According to the...
View ArticleBy: Andree Sosler
Duncan: Thrilled that you are addressing this issue on your blog! Did you know that Oxfam America has been working to address this issue in partnership with our organization, Potential Energy?...
View ArticleBy: Jeremy Doyle
Ian, Thanks for this excellent summary. There is still far too little attention paid to this subject. We should never underestimate the cultural diversity: solutions need to respond to what people want...
View ArticleBy: Muhammmad Abbas Khan
No I Don’t agree India and Pakistan can live without electricity also But don’t sold their bodies on the name of energy there are many other sources is south with a new blessing of climate change we...
View ArticleBy: Caroline
This is a classic example of how the gender division of labour in the home, and the invisibility of women’s role in care work, leads to a key issue for them – and ironically for children too, while...
View ArticleBy: Emily
Designing and marketing clean, efficient cookstoves that people actually want to use is indeed a hard task, but there are some success stories. Experience tells us that development practitioners trying...
View ArticleBy: Hilke
This might sound like a really dumb question (and I don’t propose it as a solution as the problem is more complex), but besides the rainy season: Why don’t people suffering from the smoke, cook on a...
View ArticleBy: Ian Bray
Hi Hilke Good question. When I first encountered this issue it puzzle me as well. “For very practical reasons people usually do not cook outside. In the dry season it’s too hot, in the rainy season it...
View ArticleBy: Sam Gardner
When I was working with improved stoves, now years ago, the acceptance was good, as long as the project subsidized. We tried to work with gas stoves instead, and there was enthusiasm. According to the...
View ArticleBy: Andree Sosler
Duncan: Thrilled that you are addressing this issue on your blog! Did you know that Oxfam America has been working to address this issue in partnership with our organization, Potential Energy?...
View ArticleBy: Jeremy Doyle
Ian, Thanks for this excellent summary. There is still far too little attention paid to this subject. We should never underestimate the cultural diversity: solutions need to respond to what people want...
View Article
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