Tom Sponheim (talk | contribs) mNo edit summary |
Tom Sponheim (talk | contribs) mNo edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{GoogleTranslateLinks}} |
{{GoogleTranslateLinks}} |
||
− | {{Updated| |
+ | {{Updated|6|1|12}} |
[[Image:Sperancea_Gabone_2006.jpg|right|153px]] |
[[Image:Sperancea_Gabone_2006.jpg|right|153px]] |
||
'''Sperancea Gabone''' has been active solar cooking promoter since 1999. On last report she had produced 20 cookers, demonstrating solar cooking to 2000 or more people. |
'''Sperancea Gabone''' has been active solar cooking promoter since 1999. On last report she had produced 20 cookers, demonstrating solar cooking to 2000 or more people. |
Revision as of 19:44, 15 March 2014
Last edited: 1 June 2012
|
Sperancea Gabone has been active solar cooking promoter since 1999. On last report she had produced 20 cookers, demonstrating solar cooking to 2000 or more people.
News and recent developments
- June 2012: Sperancea sent this photo of a workshop Majengo Ward - Moshi Tanzania
- March 2006: Sperancea Gabone recently held a solar cooker exhibition at Mawenzi primary school in Moshi, Tanzania. Over 20 people gathered to learn about solar cooking and to taste solar-cooked food, including ugali, meat, beans and rice. Rolf Behringer, of the International Solar Energy Society (ISES), led a solar box cooker construction workshop at nearby Karanga Technical School, and joined Ms. Gabone at the exhibition. In addition to solar box cookers, retained-heat cookers were also used. (A retained-heat cooker, also known as a fireless cooker or “hay box,” is an insulated enclosure in which is set a pot of food that has been brought to a boil, allowing it to continue to cook after being removed from its heat source.) Contact: Sperancea Gabone
See also
- July 2006: Conserve the Environment - Heal Tanzania by Solar Cookers - Sperancea K. Gabone
External links
Contact
Kilimanjaro Biogas and Solar Center
P.O. Box 7322
Moshi
Tanzania