This project reduces CO2 emissions, harmful indoor smoke and deforestation through the introduction of efficient cookstoves in the Bengaluru region of India. Due to the low income of local households, women cannot purchase an efficient cookstove.
Project Details
Project Title | Care India Improved cookstoves for Women |
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Project Type | Cookstoves |
Project Location | India (Karnataka) |
Annual Impacts | Continuous impact across the land areas |
GHG Platform | Gold Standard Mechanism |
Project ID | TBD |
Project Catalogue | |
SDGs |
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Project Brief
About 16% of the Bengaluru's population lives in its 520 recognized slums, stuck in the vicious circle of poverty, worsening inequalities even more with the ongoing pandemic. The socio-cultural context that constitutes cooking on traditional stoves in urban slums revealed a dynamic and highly interconnected network of factors such as poverty, tradition, perceptions surrounding smoke and scarcity of resources that varied widely between and within the slums. Cooking is done on an open fire which is harmful to health. Moreover, for a family of five people an average of 50 kilos of wood per week is required, which leads to deforestation. Together with climate change, this leads to unsuccessful harvests for farmers due to unpredictable rainfall, flooding and extreme drought.
This project would reduce wood consumption by two-thirds and significantly reduces CO2 emissions and smoke. Alongwith reduction in GHG emissions the project would help in addressing climate change and improving women health to a significant extent.