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Traditional Ways of Cooking In Impoverished Nations

Traditional Ways of Cooking In Impoverished Nations. Team 4. Traditional Stoves. Wood or wood replacement fuels Primitive Stoves Fire places without chimneys Hole in the ground Kerosene, charcoal http://www.albionmonitor.com/9701a/cooksmoke.html.

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Traditional Ways of Cooking In Impoverished Nations

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  1. Traditional Ways of Cooking In Impoverished Nations Team 4

  2. Traditional Stoves • Wood or wood replacement fuels • Primitive Stoves • Fire places without chimneys • Hole in the ground • Kerosene, charcoal • http://www.albionmonitor.com/9701a/cooksmoke.html

  3. http://blog.acumenfund.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/stove-soot-target-in-climate-fight.jpghttp://blog.acumenfund.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/stove-soot-target-in-climate-fight.jpg Women Cooking

  4. http://www.artdiamondblog.com/images/BlackCarbonMburning fossil fuels or cooking with wood, dung or ap.jpg Amount of black carbon in the atmosphereIncludes emissions from crop residues

  5. Solar Cooking Systems • Box cookers • Inside Walls insulated, top transparent material, possibly glass or plastic to let light in but seal in heat • Walls covered in reflective material, cooking base colored black to absorb heat • Other shapes include a ‘bowl’ like design • Can’t be used at night • Does not use energy besides sun

  6. Panel Cookers • Use shiny metal panels to direct sunlight to pot that is in plastic bag • Plastic bags reused for over a month • Larger families use more than one pot • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_cooker

  7. Portable ‘camp’ stoves • Use Butane and propane • Need fuel and too Expensive • http://www.safetycentral.com/cookersheaters.html

  8. Possible Solutions? • Use simple methods to accumulate solar energy • Aluminum foil or reflective material • Shape of the stove to help generate heat • Use dark colors to help absorb sunlight • Optional use of plastic or transparent covering to trap heat

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