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==Contact== |
==Contact== |
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− | Fondo Mexicano Para La Conservación de la Naturaleza<br> |
+ | Fondo Mexicano Para La Conservación de la Naturaleza<br /> |
− | Damas 49<br> |
+ | Damas 49<br /> |
Mexico City, [[Mexico]] 03900 |
Mexico City, [[Mexico]] 03900 |
||
− | Email: [mailto: |
+ | Email: [mailto:liliana.urbina@fmcn.org liliana.urbina@fmcn.org], [mailto:monica.alvarez@fmcn.org monica.alvarez@fmcn.org]<br /> |
− | Web: http://www.fmcn.org |
+ | Web: http://www.fmcn.org, [http://www.ollasolar.com.mx www.ollasolar.com.mx] |
[[Category:NGOs]] |
[[Category:NGOs]] |
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[[Category:Mexico]] |
[[Category:Mexico]] |
Revision as of 22:16, 19 October 2011
Mexico has been a focus of Solar Household Energy’s solar cooking promotion efforts since 2003, when it partnered with the Mexican Nature Conservation Fund (Fondo Mexicano Para La Conservación de la Naturaleza) in a pilot project to introduce HotPots in the Sierra Gorda preservation area north of Mexico City. SHE co-founder Louise Meyer makes regular trips to Mexico to oversee projects in several Mexican communities, supported by grants from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the World Bank’s Development Marketplace.
The EPA project seeks to analyze the potential for solar cooking devices to reduce exposure to indoor air pollution – specifically smoke caused by cooking indoors over wood-fueled stoves. Project results will be published in late 2006.
At present, SHE and FMCN are employing both NGOs (including the Grupo Ecologico Sierra Gorda) and individual private distributors to bring HotPots to rural and urban consumers. In addition, approximately 3,000 HotPots have been distributed in Mexico to date throughout the country. An environmental affairs agency of the state of Zacatecas recently purchased 500 HotPots for distribution there, and SHE is helping to guide that process.
SHE is also directing and underwriting a targeted distribution, training and solar cooking utilization study in Nogales, Mexico, being carried out by a team from the University of Arizona led by Dr. Diane Austin, an associate research anthropologist with the University.
Recent news and developments
- May 2011: Solar Household Energy(SHE) is working to expand the solar cooking promotion efforts it undertook in Mexico with the Mexican Fund for the Conservation of Nature (FMCN) begun in 2004. They has also been active in the areas of solar cooking advocacy, research and technology development. Read more in the SHE spring update 2011.
External links
Contact
Fondo Mexicano Para La Conservación de la Naturaleza
Damas 49
Mexico City, Mexico 03900
Email: liliana.urbina@fmcn.org, monica.alvarez@fmcn.org
Web: http://www.fmcn.org, www.ollasolar.com.mx