clean cookstoves

Improving health for women and children by providing a safe environment to cooking.

Why clean cookstoves matter

Clean cookstoves improve health by decreasing indoor air pollution. Cooking in the DRC can be dangerous, inefficient and costly. Current cooking practices, which use open fires or traditional cookstoves, produce smoke and toxic fumes that contain hazardous gases and particulate matter. The smoke and fume products are collectively referred to as household air pollution or HAP. In the DRC, HAP causes serious environmental and health impacts. HAP-related illness, for example, is estimated to contribute to 75,000 deaths each year, particularly among young children. An estimated 95% of children under five are currently exposed to HAP on a regular basis and 15% are diagnosed with life-threatening diseases, including lung cancer and asthma. There is a lack of awareness, in both urban and rural communities, regarding the correlation between exposure to HAP and these health conditions.

The youngest children, especially babies strapped to mother’s back, spend their days and nights close to the fire. From an early age they become so accustomed to smoke that they will not move out of it even given easy opportunity to do so.

Benefits of the stove:

  1. Reduces fuel use by over 50%
  2. Tier four stove in all categories
  3. Stove cost on $15
  4. Produces charcoal that can be sold or used

Inefficient and hazardous cooking practices also impact families’ economic well-being. The heaviest burden falls on the poorest people in rural areas. Most households rely on biofuels, such as wood and charcoal, for cooking. In rural areas, women and girls are expected to gather and carry wood for the fuel each day across many kilometers, creating higher workloads. As a result, they are drawn away from other productive activities like generating income and school. Fuel accounts for 80% of the family budget amongst the most disadvantaged households.

mt|panorama_horizontal|

95%

of children under five are currently exposed to HAP on a regular basis and 15% are diagnosed with life-threatening diseases, including lung cancer and asthma.

Our Approach to Providing Clean Cookstoves in DRC

ASSP is addressing HAP as a cross-cutting strategy to reduce morbidity and mortality among women and children under five, which are the most vulnerable. Specifically, ASSP is introducing clean cookstoves in order to reduce total population exposure to HAP. Clean cookstoves also reduce fuel requirements at the household level. Thus freeing up time for girls to go to school and adults to partake in income-generating activities. As a result, families experience an increase in wealth and wellbeing. In addition, clean cookstoves reduce the pressure on forest resources in the DRC.

Key Achievements

PIlot Designs

IMA has completed multiple phases of stove design involving local pilots. These valuable pilots included focus group discussions and observations to determine how the design should be improved.

scaling up

IMA is currently preparing to scale-up clean cookstoves in several health zones based upon these findings.

Increasing Access to Health Care

Read more about how ASSP is contributing to improved health by increasing access to health care.

QUICK CONTACTS

    1730 M Street, NW, Suite 1100        Washington, DC 20036

    +1-202-888-6200

    info@imaworldhealth.org

    www.imaworldhealth.org

Recent Posts

Staff Q&A with Evan Schellenberg

What is your title at IMA? I am the Construction Coordinator in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). How long have you been working for IMA? I started in March 2014. Where do you live? I live in Kinshasa, DRC. I am originally from Steinbach, Manitoba, Canada. As a...

Another Health Center Completed in DRC!

The IMA Construction Team has completed its third health center in Kasai Occidental province in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Construction on Lumumba Health Center began May 15, 2014, and was completed March 15 of this year. Before the construction of Lumumba,...