Campaign Turns Up the Heat on Humble But Lethal Cookstoves

Cookstoves aren’t thought of as menaces comparable to, say, automatic weapons or flu pandemics. But the humble devices lead to an estimated 1.9 million premature deaths per year along with untold environmental damage.

The inefficient, high-polluting stoves remain the primary cooking method for some 3 billion people around the world, contributing to pneumonia in young children, bronchitis, lung cancer and heart disease, according to the Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves.  The stoves also contribute to climate change and force women and children to risk life and limb collecting fuel, such as wood and animal dung, in war zones and refugee camps.

Now the Global Alliance, which is leading an effort to produce and distribute cleaner-burning stoves, is getting a boost. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton announced a donation of nearly $51 million, with the money coming from the State Department, the Environmental Protection Agency, the U.S. Agency for International Development, and other agencies.

The goal is to switch 100 million homes around the globe to clean cookstoves by 2020. The U.S. will help identify markets, secure the participation of women, and develop a research plan to advance the Alliance’s work, the State Department said.

“Today we can finally envision a future in which open fires and dirty stoves are replaced by clean, efficient and affordable stoves and fuels all over the world — stoves that still cost as little as $25,” Clinton said.  “By upgrading these dirty stoves, millions of lives could be saved and improved.”

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