New Delhi: Your kitchen stove can do more than cook your meals.

Some 400,000 Indians die each year due to the toxic fumes from kitchen stoves that use firewood or biomass like cow-dung. A British NGO has now joined forces to stop this hazard by introducing improved stoves or chulhas in India.

These stoves also use firewood, cow-dung and other biomass like the traditional chulhas, but they emit less fumes and use lesser fuel, ideal for people who cannot afford fuels like LPG or biogas.

According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), some 1.5 to 2 million people worldwide die prematurely in poorly ventilated homes each year from stove fumes that cause pneumonia, chronic respiratory and heart diseases, low birth weight and even tuberculosis. Of these, some 400,000 people die in India alone. In comparison, malaria kills about one million people and Aids 1.7 to 2.4 million.

Private sector

The Shell Foundation plans to promote clean stoves in India through ‘a market-based approach with private sector participation, focusing on availability, affordability, accessibility and accountability'.

It is collaborating with stove manufacturers and microfinance institutions in Karnataka, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh to promote the improved kitchen stoves.

"Given that firewood will continue to be used in most rural households, it is now largely accepted that the most effective way to reduce smoke is through improved stoves," Anuradha Bhavnani, regional director of Shell Foundation, told IANS.

"This is why building better stoves and finding a way to persuade the poor to use them has become a priority," she added.

"An open fire, burning wood or dung, can on average produce as much carbon dioxide as a car — and a great deal more of black carbon (or soot), a substance whose warming effect is 700x higher than carbon dioxide," Bhavnani pointed out.

Over the past year, the foundation has tested several strategies in collaboration with the Anganwadi workers, stove manufacturers and microfinance institutions.

Royal Dutch Shell Plc, a global group of energy and petrochemicals companies and founder of the Shell Foundation, has pledged $6 million (Dh22 million) to the newly launched UN-led Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves (GACC) to cut greenhouse gas emissions and prevent deaths caused by smoke from cooking stoves.
 
"The alliance has raised $64 million so far from organizations like Morgan Stanley, UNF, SF, Shell the company and several governments, including Norway and the US," said Simon Bishop, head of the Room to Breathe initiative of the foundation. It is aiming to be a $250 million public-private partnership, he said.