$19,250.00 from profits from fiscal year 2018
Carbon Offsets Project
Over 3 billion people around the world cook using open fire. Each year, close to 4 million people die from illnesses attributed to household air pollution resulting from this style of cooking. In Uganda, 94% of rural households cook over an open fire. Meal preparation als has a large impact on the social development of women and children, as it is their responsibility to maintain the fires and collect firewood - time that could be spent in school or within the safety of the community.
Aid Africa provides free cookstoves to families living in rural Uganda. Their “Rocket Stoves” are a very simple design utilizing 6 bricks formed completely from local materials. The bricks act as insulation, keeping the fire very hot so that the fuel is burned up completely. This produces very little smoke, as smoke is unburned fuel. The Rocket Stove was designed by a collective of engineers and improved over the years to be very inexpensive, easy to produce and repair, and accessible to most people. The stove uses 46% less fuel for cooking than an open fire and produces 75% less emissions. Each stove removes 2.4 tons of carbon from the air.
Aid Africa teaches communities how to construct the stoves; including digging the clay and forming the bricks. They train the community on how to use them and help install them in households.
1,500 fuel-efficient, low-carbon-emission stoves for households in the rural communities around Gulu, Uganda, benefitting more than 8,000 people in 15 villages. The cookstoves create a 4,000 ton reduction in carbon emissions each year.
Indirect impacts:
A World Centric partner since 2017.
Aid Africa is working to bring help and hope to the poorest of the poor in Uganda. Their vision is to rebuild 1,000 sustainable communities by providing clean water, efficient and cleaner-burning stoves, farming and reforestation, and other household necessities.
Aid Africa’s first project took place in 2005, after founder Ken Goyer had visited Uganda to teach more efficient cooking methods and realized the urgent need for support services in IDP (Internally Displaced Person) camps. He started by building Rocket Stoves. In 2009, the Ugandan government closed the camps, forcing tens of thousands of people back to rural villages in complete poverty. Aid Africa adapted to the new situation and began providing a community-based approach to providing efficient cookstoves, clean water, and healthcare access in villages, while also planting trees.
More projects with Aid Africa:
Tags: Impact Projects
Written by
World Centric
Read time
3 minutes
Published on
May 16, 2018
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