Published online: 31 March 2005; |
doi:10.1038/news050328-7
Charcoal fuel gets green light
Jessica Ebert
Africa will win environmental and
health benefits if it stops burning wood.


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More efficient stoves could be the key to
some of Africa's pollution and health woes.
© M. Ezzati |
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A shift from burning wood to burning
charcoal in African households could save millions of lives and
substantially reduce emissions of greenhouse gases, say US researchers.
If current trends in fuel use in
sub-Saharan Africa continue, the number of premature deaths among women
and young children exposed to wood smoke from stoves will reach nearly
10 million by 2030, from about 400,000 in 2000. What's more, cooking
fires will pump 6.7 billion tonnes of carbon into the atmosphere as
greenhouse gases in the next 45 years, the researchers calculate.
"These numbers are absolutely shocking,"
says John Spengler, an environmental-health expert at Harvard University
in Cambridge, Massachusetts. "We have to pay attention to this."
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The research team, led by Dan Kammen
of the University of California, Berkeley, predicted the health and
environmental effects of introducing new fuel-use and land-management
strategies, either gradually (over the next 50 years) or rapidly (within
10 to 15 years).
Kerosene or charcoal
A switch from burning wood to burning
petroleum-based fossil fuels such as kerosene would reduce indoor air
pollution by at least 90%, and prevent as many as 3.7 million deaths
from respiratory illness, depending on how quickly the transition was
made, the researchers report in this week's Science1.
Although this seems like a quick and
easy fix, development of the necessary fuel-distribution infrastructure,
given the continent's difficult economic situation, make this option
"totally unaffordable for Africa", says Kammen.


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Africans are being urged to reduce their
reliance on wood-burning.
© D. M. Kammen |
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A more feasible solution with similar
health and environmental benefits would be to shift from burning wood to
burning charcoal, the researchers suggest. Although charcoal is the
leading urban fuel in Africa and releases less indoor particulate matter
when burned than wood, its use does not garner much support from
policy-makers or environmentalists.
"Charcoal production is associated with
deforestation," explains Kammen's colleague Rob Bailis. "And as it is
currently practised it is a dirty process." Charcoal is typically made
by covering a stack of wood with dirt and allowing it to smoulder for
three to seven days. This process is inefficient and pollutes the air.
Cleaner creation
However, the researchers' model predicts
that a large-scale shift to burning charcoal, combined with sustainable
forest management and use of more efficient charcoal-production
technologies, would avert some 3 million premature deaths and reduce
greenhouse-gas emissions by 65% if implemented rapidly. Even if adopted
gradually over 50 years, the move would ultimately delay 1 million
deaths and cut greenhouse-gas emissions by 45%, relative to simply
carrying on as usual.
Furthermore, the technologies to make charcoal more cleanly and
efficiently, such as permanent brick or steel kilns with systems to
control emissions, could be easily implemented. "You don't often come
across a situation where existing technology would make such a big
difference," says Kammen.
Although the authors do not outline
specific policy recommendations, their findings address several of the
UN Millennium Development Goals, including reducing child mortality and
ensuring environmental sustainability.
"The decisions made today are going to
determine whether we reach those outcomes," says Bailis. "Our findings
are meant to encourage as much dialogue as possible and remove some of
the tarnish associated with the use of charcoal."
References
- Bailis R., Ezzati M. & Kammen D. Science, 308.
98 - 103 (2005). | Article |
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