Solar Cooking
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==Events==
 
==Events==
 
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[[Category:Countries with the greatest solar cooking potential]]
 
[[Category:Countries with the greatest solar cooking potential]]

Revision as of 17:57, 4 May 2014

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Last edited: 24 February 2012      

Events

See Calendar of events

News and Recent Developments

Rakia Maman Niger - Netherlands November 2008

Moustapha Maman’s wife Rakia Maman uses a millet chaff-filled jute bag to insulated a pot of food

  • October 2011: An NGO called Aridité Prospère trained new carpenters in building solar box cookers, this time based on the Dierkx model, with support from Solar Cooker Workgroup Sliedrecht NL. The carpenters were located in Zinder and Niamey. In collaboration with Tahoua Import, a workshop was organised in Niamey, training early adopters from the Niamey and Agadez regions in the use of Dierkx box cookers and CooKits. The cookers were further displayed and sold at the SAFEM international fair in December.
  • November 2008: It was reported in the November 2007 Solar Cookers Review that a retained-heat device could be fabricated from two (or more) empty plastic rice bags insulated between with wool or cotton and covered with a third insulated bag, making a container that will keep a pot of food at cooking temperatures long after it is removed from a heat source. Wietske Jongbloed of the Dutch charity KoZon Foundation reports that these work well, but over time the rice bags can develop tears and holes. One of her Niger colleagues, Moustapha Maman, suggests that replacing the outside rice bags with jute bags may add durability, and that millet chaff can be used as an alternative insulation. How did Maman find out about the millet chaff? He used to be a teacher in several villages in Niger. In a fairytale-like story, one day he came across a goose brooding on several eggs. A snake attacked and killed the goose (and the goose fatally injured the snake). Maman put the eggs in a basket filled with millet chaff in hopes that it would keep the eggs warm, which it did. Several days later, eight goslings hatched. Maman says that everyday when he came home from school the goslings recognized their “mother” and followed him.
Idadafoua in Niger 2007
  • November 2007: At the 2006 International Solar Cookers Conference in Spain, Wietske Jongbloed of the KoZon Foundation learned a useful trick from David and Ruth Whitfield: a heat-retention cooker can be made from empty rice bags. The Whitfields advised that two large rice bags, with insulation such as wool or cotton in between, make a sack that will keep a pot of food at cooking temperatures long after it is removed from a heat source. KoZon introduced the idea in Tahoua, Niger, where cooking pots are typically very large — 12 to 16 liters. For these pots, four rice bags are needed to surround the pot, and a fifth bag stuffed with insulation covers the top. Of this five-bag system, Jongbloed says, “It is named ‘Idadafoua’ and works marvelously.” Jongbloed writes that women in the Sahel cook meals for families of 10 to 12 or more people. The KoZon project in Tahoua teaches the use of three cooking devices — fuel-efficient wood stoves, heat-retention cookers, and solar CooKits. CooKits are used on sunny days for meat or fish sauces, eggs, sweet potatoes, and groundnuts, and for cakes that are sold by the slice to earn money.
  • November 2006: Wietske Jongbloed reports that she and a team of three others in Tahoua trained 14 women, all teachers and civil servants, in the complimentary technologies of solar cookers, fuel-efficient wood stoves, and heat-retention cookers. The first two days of the training were cloudy, so the focus was on fuel-efficient stoves ("poêle économe") and heat-retention cookers ("bitatoré"). Heat-retention cookers are insulated enclosures in which is set a pot of food that has been brought to a boil, allowing the food to continue to cook after being removed from the heat source. Rice, meat, and legume dishes were cooked successfully using this method. On days three and four the sun started to shine. Peanuts and sweet potatoes were cooked in solar CooKits and shared with five visiting directors of ministries. The directors praised the solar-cooked food, along with the dishes prepared with the other devices. Jongloed recalled, "They asked where the cooked peanuts were, which I thought were meant for the children, and just ate the peanuts up and praised the CooKit in which the peanuts were cooked and made speeches telling us that they would help in all ways if the women of Tahoua could all be taught to use these complimentary devices." On the final day, several banana cakes were baked in CooKits, as were a couple dozen eggs. After the 14 women gain more experience using the three complimentary devices, several of them will be chosen to lead future trainings. The goal is to train close to 200 women, and to provide them each with a CooKit. Affordable purchase plans for the fuel-efficient stoves and heat-retention cookers are being explored. Contact: Wietske Jongbloed, Stichting KoZon, Hollandseweg 384, 6705 BE Wageningen, Netherlands. Tel: 31-317412370, fax: 31-317410732, mailto:wietske-jongbloed@tele2.nl

The History of Solar Cooking in Niger

Niger's solar cooking experience started early, with the well-known professor Abdoul Moumouni. He was a pioneer in solar energy, constructing amongst other things concentrator based cookers. The country's second president, Seyni Kountché created a research center for him called ONERSOL (Office Nigérien de l'Énergie Solaire). Later, ONERSOL was restructured and renamed CNES (Centre National de l'Énergie Solaire).

A representative of the Department of Social Development, Population, Promotion of Women and Welfare of Children, Government of Niger, made a presentation at the conference in Varese in 1999. Outlining the situation in Niger, the Minister, Mme Foumakoye Nana Aicha, discussed the energy situation, highlighting the use of wood in 90% of all households and the serious consumption of forest resources that use represented, as well as the amount of carbon emissions released to the atmosphere. The nation is seeking both to preserve its already fragile environment (around 1% forested land) and to reduce its dependence on imported fuels. A variety of renewable technologies are under consideration, including solar cooking. The National Solar Energy Center (CNES) is conducting experiments with parabolic cookers and boxes, for large-scale dissemination, planning for up to 40,000 cookers. The minister's speech illustrated a good understanding of the importance of the topic, in terms of global environmental circumstances (Varese, p. 57). However, no further information is available on the status of the plan at this time.

Against that large vision for Niger, a smaller scale endeavor has been launched by the KoZon Foundation, which has also worked in Burkina Faso and Mali. The inexpensive solar cooking device, the CooKit, was introduced in the Niger town of Kirkissoy, in connection with other local agencies in 2002. No further information is available on the progress of that work, which was only beginning.

In 2004, a local NGO named Hasken Rana trained a local carpenter in Zinder to manufacture solar box cookers similar to the ULOG model, and marketed these. They were based on a model used in a Bolivian project. The NGO closed after a few years.

The NGO Aridité Prospère sell Dierkx model solar box cookers in Niamey and Zinder since 2011.

Climate, Culture, and Special Considerations

  • Northern part of the country: Desert (Sahel). Southern part of the country: Sunny, little firewood, and populated. (Source: Juan Urrutia Sanz, 2010-Feb-25)
  • A NASA study from 2007 concluded that the sunniest place on earth, oceans excluded, was near Agadem in eastern Niger. (Source: enerzine.com, 2007-Dec-18)

See also

Resources

Reports

Discussion groups

Articles in the media

External links

Contacts

The entities listed below are either based in Niger, or have established solar cooking projects there:

SCI Associates

NGOs

Manufacturers and vendors

Individuals

Government agencies

Educational institutions

See also

References