Field-based safety guidelines for solid fuel household cookstoves in developing countries. Energy for Sustainable Development, Volume 25, April 2015, Pages 56–66.
Authors: Nathan G. Johnsona, Kenneth M. Bryden
Highlights
- Hazard analysis of solid fuel household cookstoves used in the developing world.
- Ten safety principles for developing world household cookstoves are presented.
- Field-based testing safety protocols are developed.
- Standardized safety metrics for solid fuel cookstoves are presented.
- Low-cost safety testing kits for US$100–150 can be deployed in the field.
The burning of solid fuels for cooking creates significant adverse health, social, and economic consequences for more than three billion people worldwide. Recognizing this issue, many groups have worked to develop improved stoves that increase fuel efficiency, decrease fuel use, and reduce particulate emissions. Less attention has been given to developing a standardized process for rating cookstove safety and reducing cookstove hazards.
This paper identifies common cooking hazards and seeks to reduce cooking injuries by proposing ten field-based safety guidelines for solid fuel stoves. Each guideline describes an underlying safety principle and is accompanied by a test protocol and a metric to rate stove safety. This incremental rating system enables stove designers, donors, and consumers to track and promote stepwise safety improvements. The protocols use low-cost equipment to allow the many manufacturers of handcrafted cookstoves to assess safety without using sophisticated testing facilities and expensive equipment.