Clean cooking energy for india

Post on 07-Feb-2017

26 views 2 download

transcript

CLEAN COOKING ENERGY FOR INDIA

Dr. N. Sai Bhaskar Reddysaibhaskarnakka@gmail.com

3rd Ja

nuar

y 20

16

Thre

e St

one

stov

es

Environment

Poverty

Family

Women and Children

Biomass Conservation

Climate Change

Drudgery

HealthSustainability

http://cleancookstoves.org/binary-data/RESOURCE/file/000/000/204-1.pdf

Government School Stoves

Gove

rnm

ent S

choo

l Sto

ves

LIVE DEMO

Heaps of fuel wood burnt – loss of biomass

PROSOPIS JULIFLORAMAIN SOURCE

FIRE

SMOKE

CHARCOAL

ASH

SMO

KE

SOOT

PART

ICU

LATE

MAT

TER

Types of stoves

GOOD STOVES

http://goodsto

ve.com

MAGH 3G STOVE

PRIMARY AIR (CONTROL OPTIONAL)

AIR FROM SIDES WITH FAN OR NATURAL DRAFT(SHUTTER TO CONTROL THE NATURAL DRAFT)

SECONDARY AIR

Stove Design by: Dr. N. Sai Bhaskar Reddy, CEO, GEO (April, 2010) http://www.goodstove.com

FUELSTICKSCHARCOALWOOD SHAVINGSSAW DUSTBRIQUETTESPELLETS

TLUD WOODGAS COMBUSTION CHAMBER OPTIONAL

SECONDARY AIR

PRIMARY AIR

FUELSTICKS /CHIPS OF WOOD /DRY LEAVES /HUSK

DETACHABLE STEEL GRATE & OPENING FOR REMOVING ASH (OPTIONAL)

PYROLYSIS ZONE

COVER LID (to control the excess primary air when fuel wood is less)

45 Deg.

OPTIONAL SECONDARY WOODGAS FRAME

3

6

5

1

2

4

8

GRAVITY FUELWOOD FEEDING SLOPE

7

AVAN STOVE

MAGH-1 WOODGAS STOVE

TWISTER WOODGAS STOVE

GOOD STOVE

Opening for air flowunderneath the sticks

Fuel wood

Base Platform

MAGH CM WOODGAS STOVE

MAG

H 3G

STO

VESecondary AirSide Air

Primary Air Side Air

KITCHEN LAB EXPERIMENTS

Good Stoves – Community participation in design and adaptation

Low-Cost Wood Gas Stoves designed with community participation

Good Stoves

“Good Stove” for the Primary school

OPEN HOUSE STOVE PLACE

Adoption of Good Stoves

GOOD STOVES ADOPTATION FACTORS

GOOD STOVES MUSEUM

Distribution of household cooking fuel use in India in 2005

Plants

Stoves

Biochar

Soil FertilityCarbon SequestrationEmission reductionWater conservation

EnergyEmissions reductionBiomass conservationBiochar as byproduct

Carbon as biocharWater and fertilizers conservationCarbon sequestration

Note: Presenter has designed low cost highly efficient 50 good stoves that produce biochar as a byproduct. http://goodstove.com Also see the book Understanding Stoves http://metameta.nl/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/Understanding-Stoves-okt-10-webversion.pdf

BIOCHAR PRODUCING STOVES

INCREASE IN YIELD AND PRODUCTION

CULTURAL

SPIRITUAL

BELIEFS

RITUALS

FESTIVALS

ALTARS

CREMATION

SOURCES (BIOMASS)

GOOD STOVES• TLUDs• Other

stoves

CROP RESIDUE

POULTRY LITTER

WASTE MANAGEMENT• Sludge

PRACTICES

FOOD PRESERVING

FOOD

CLEANING

MEDICINE

MATTRESS

TOOTH POWDER

AIR QUALITY• CO2 / CH4WATER

TREATMENT

AQUARIUM /

TERRARIUMS

BIOCHAR BRICKS

BIOCHAR

URINALS

SOAK PITS

FILTERING MEDIA

INSECT REPELLE

NT

SOIL AMENDMENT

INCREASED PRODUCTI

ONSOIL

TEMPERATURE

REGULATED

MOISTURE RETENTION

WATER CONSERVA

TION

NITROGEN /

PHOSPHOROUS

RETENTION

NURSERIESPESTICIDES ADBSORBTI

ON

SOIL MICROBES DENSITY

INCREASE

BIOCHAR COMPOST

EARTHWORMS

INCREASE

TERMITES / ANTS

REPULSION

CARBON SEQUESTRA

TION

ANIMALS

POULTRY - CH4

REDUCTION

LIVESTOCK - URINE AND

DUNG

FYM / COMPOST

BIOMASS

BIOCHAR

BIOCHARCULTURE

JAGGERYCOMPOST

BIOCHAR

SOIL MICROBES

GREEN MULCH

TEST PLOTS CONTROL BIOCHAR COMPOST

4 KGS 8 KGS 12 KGS

P R

E S

S

THANK YOU …

Book published by MetaMeta, Netherlands, August 2014

http://metameta.nl

http://goodstove.com