Tanzania: Energy-Saving Stoves Benefit Muheza Villagers

January 15, 2013 · 0 comments

Tanzania: Energy-Saving Stoves Benefit Muheza Villagers | Tanzania Daily News, Jan 15, 2013

WHEN Khadija Mtungakoa was growing up, she had only one dream – to become a policewoman. But that did not happen as she did not go beyond Standard seven and subsequently went into subsistence farming.

After staying home for several years doing her little farming as a housewife, fortune came knocking on her way when she was invited by a friend to attend a course on making energy-saving stoves.

The training was organised by Tanzania Traditional Energy Development and Environmental Organisation’s (TaTEDO) In her village of Sakale in Muheza, they usually offered it free of charge but for it to take place, at least 20 people – with a bigger percentage being women – required to enrol.

The training took eight days and according to her, she was taught how to build and market the energy- saving stoves, skills that now earn the 36-year-old and her family their daily bread. Among the products that she has been installing in people’s homes and institutions are the rocket brick stoves.

In recent months, she has been sensitizing people on the importance of the stoves. Khadija is among beneficiaries of 180 improved stoves in 364 households of Sakale Village. Production of the stoves is supervised by Muheza District authorities, under technical guidance of TaTEDO.

The jikos, which are smoke-free and energy conserving, are made from mud, ash and ballast and can save up to 40 per cent of fuel. They are also affordable and do not cause environmental or land degradation and desertification.

“Apart from being equipped with skills and know-how, we want this to reach more people,” she says. She says they started the project with the aim of improving the livelihood of farmers. The collaboration has seen more than 500 people trained in the region. Among the 400 people that we have trained, she is among the best and we normally send her to big institutions and hotels that require these stoves, she says.

As for her, the main difficulty she faces is accessing some of the areas, thus making it difficult for her to transport construction materials. She is, however, currently also involved in training her colleagues on how to make the “green” stoves.

Through TaTEDO’s technical assistance, 364 households have been assisted with 180 improved stoves at Sakale Village in Muheza. The production of the stoves is supervised by Muheza District authorities, under technical guidance of TaTEDO.

The TaTEDO coordinator for eastern zone Mudy Nyimbile, supervising the making of the energy saving stoves whose main raw materials is clay, says 1,000 of the stoves could save 1,716 tonnes of firewood a year in 11 villages surrounding the Amani Nature Reserve.

One of the beneficiaries, Beatrice Peter said she used to collect between two and three bundles of firewood, but she now collects only twice per week from the nearby Amani forest reserve. The Sakale village executive officer Allan Hiza said improved stoves project is important for the conservation of the Amani Nature Reserve.

Made from bricks, ant-hill soil, saw dust or banana stems for building the combustion chambers and fine sand, the stoves that are either permanent or semi -permanent can last for more than 10 years. They use one or two twigs and help to save energy, thanks to technology.

Besides saving the environment, the project leaders said that they are upbeat that the technology is increasingly turning into an income-generating activity as it spreads fast. Unlike the traditional three stones used for cooking or the usual charcoal stoves, rocket concentrates burning within the stove’s perimeter and heat is retained since the walls are built to absorb and keep it in.

In some highly populated areas in the country, trees are cut with abandon since over 90 per cent of the energy needs are sourced from biomass namely firewood and charcoal. The Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves is seeking to have the East African Community (EAC) member states to scale up the adoption of the clean cooking stoves technology with the help of local Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs) like Global Village Energy Partnership (GVEP).

GVEP international works by providing affordable finance to small businesses dealing in modern energy equipment which can in turn be sold out at affordable prices. An energy and environmental specialist, Mr Bariki Kaale, says biomass-based fuel accounts for more than 90 per cent of primary energy supply in Tanzania.

Mr Kaale says that commercial energy sources like petroleum and electricity, accounts for about 8 per cent and 1.2 per cent respectively of the primary energy used. Coal, solar and wind accounts for about 0.8 per cent of energy used. Unfortunately, says Kaale, the national energy balance has remained static for over five decades as from 1961 to 2011.

 

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