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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: solar cookers + solar cooker + tibet  Related to the article below (Last Update: 6/5/2008)

Harnessing the Tibetan sun
MIT News, MA - Jun 4, 2008
The solar cooker can be made for a cost of about $17, Frank says -- about the same price as the current heavy concrete model. In addition, the cookers can ...

Economist
China, India and climate change
Economist, UK -
The first ?carbon neutral? summer games involve solar power aplenty, tree-planting, banning many cars from the streets and ?reducing emissions from ...
Sichuan quake stokes inflation in China / Agricultural goods, rare ...
The Daily Yomiuri, Japan - May 19, 2008
... a material used to make semiconductors and solar cells. Most of the silicon used in production comes from Aba, Tibetan and Qiang Autonomous Prefecture. ...
Source: Google News

Can solar cooking save the forests? -
M Tucker - Ecological Economics, 1999 - Elsevier
... this and other reasons discussed, the solar oven has a ... landscape of northwest China
and Tibet and the ... Simply marketing solar cookers on the basis of benefits ...

Solar cookers?cheap technology with high ecological benefits -
SS Nandwani - Ecological Economics, 1996 - Elsevier
... Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Chile, India, Tibet, Kenya, Cuba ... Preliminary study of solar
powered microwave oven. ... and B. Blum (Editors), Developments in Solar Cookers. ...

[CITATION] Benefiting Remote Tibetan Communities with Solar Cooker Technology
DA Webb - review with ?Practicing Anthropology, 2005

Renewable energy development in China: Resource assessment, technology status, and greenhouse gas … -
L Junfeng, Y Wan, JM Ohi - Applied Energy, 1997 - Elsevier
... savings will enable users to recover the cost of a solar cooker in 2 ... and western
China, including Inner Mongolia, Xinjiang, Qinghai, Gansu, and Tibet, as well ...

Energy resources for remote highland areas
P Schweizer, K Preiser - Mountains of the World: A global priority."(B. Messerli. and …, 1997 - books.google.com
... In Tibet for example, they are used to prepare tea. ... The risk of accidents is higher
than for other solar cookers due to concentration of sunlight at the focal ...

[PDF] Renewable Energy Technologies in Asia: A Review of Current Status
SC Bhattacharya, S Kumar - World - retsasia.ait.ac.th
... now has around 140,000 units of solar cookers in operation ... culminated in the development
of solar cell/module ... the rural communities in Inner Mongolia and Tibet. ...

[PDF] Development and Application of Solar Cookers in China
C Xiaofu - Unpublished report in English provided to the author, 2004 - cnrre.org.cn
... Solar cookers have swiftly gained a vast ground in the areas where lack of firewood
and ... Tibet takes the second and the next two provinces are Qinghai and Hebei ...

Renewable energy technologies for fuelwood conservation in the Indian Himalayan region -
R Prasad, S Maithel, A Mirza - Sustainable Development, 2001 - doi.wiley.com
... Punjab, north-west of Haryana and Uttar Pradesh and west of Tibet. ... Improved cookstove,
biogas, solar cookers, solar water heaters and biomass gasifier are some ...

R ENEWABLE E NERGY M ARKETS IN D EVELOPING C OUNTRIES* -
E Martinot, A Chaurey, D Lew, JR Moreira, N … - Annual Reviews in Energy and the Environment, 2002 - Annual Reviews
... autonomous regions of Qinghai, Xinjiang, Tibet, Inner Mongolia ... increased demand for
alternatives like solar home systems (51 ... BIOGAS FOR HOME LIGHTING AND COOKING ...

Energy environment and agriculture in China
H Chengchun - Science and Technology Committee, Beijing, United Nations … - fao.org
... greenhouse were set up in Tibet and resulted ... low affordable costs for bread boxes,
solar water heaters ... small standalone wind mills, biogas cooking equipment and ...

Source: Google Scholar


Article adapted by Iconocast from original press release.

In the World logo

Harnessing the Tibetan sun

Student project aims to reduce deforestation and lung disease

David Chandler, MIT News Office
June 4, 2008

In many villages throughout Tibet, there are two ways to cook a meal. There's the traditional open fire, fueled by yak dung or the region's increasingly scarce wood. And then there are solar cookers, concentrating mirrors made of two-inch-thick concrete and covered with a mosaic of small glass mirrors.

The fires produce a lot of smoke, which, especially in the confined quarters of a kitchen, can lead to lung disease. The solar cookers are clean, but so heavy that it takes four people to move one, and they have a poorly engineered focus that sometimes lights fires, cooks food unevenly or even damages metal pots.

When MIT student Scot Frank and Catlin Powers of Wellesley College visited Tibet two years ago, one thing they kept hearing from the villagers was that it would make a big difference to their lives if there was a solar cooker that was lightweight enough to be carried with them when they went off to spend the day tending their fields or their flocks, yet strong enough to stand up to the strong winds that howl across the Tibetan plateau.

A team of students from MIT and from Qinghai Normal University in Tibet's Amdo region ended up producing exactly that. The lightweight dish they produced, inspired by Tibetan nomadic tents, is made of yak-wool canvas panels, supported by bamboo ribs, and faced with reflective mylar. Easily disassembled and transported by one person, the cooker can then be quickly reassembled in the field and staked down solidly on the ground to resist the wind. In the fall, the students will begin testing their prototype in several villages, and make the design available to local factories for manufacture.

The team, called SolSource Tibet, entered MIT's annual IDEAS competition for technologies that have the potential to make significant improvements in the lives of people in developing countries, and won one of two Yunus Innovation Challenge awards, winning $3,000 to help develop the project.

Frank, a senior with a double major in biology and electrical engineering and computer science, has spent about a year and a half in the Tibet region over the last four years, and plans for the new solar cooker emerged from discussions he and Powers had with villagers there about how to improve their situations.

They then teamed up with MIT students Orian Welling, who had previously taught design fundamentals in Qinghai, was familiar with the area and has a background in photovoltaic solar design, and Brad Simpson, who has worked on research in clean-energy generation and had an interest in high-altitude problems, to work on the prototyping and actual construction of the test models. The goal was to find "improved designs and incorporate alternative materials for a more effective device, while still using local materials and production centers," Frank says.

The new cooker could find widespread application, he says, not only in Tibet but in surrounding areas in China, India, Nepal, Bhutan and Pakistan, and potentially in similar high-altitude regions in South America as well.

The solar cooker can be made for a cost of about $17, Frank says -- about the same price as the current heavy concrete model. In addition, the cookers can be fitted with an extra attachment and used to heat homes, for an additional $26 -- comparable to the cost of the non-renewable-fuel stoves they presently use for heating.

"After initial field testing this fall, we expect artisan training of the existing solar cooker factory workers to begin in January 2009 when Catlin, Brad and I will be onsite to assist in training and technology transfer," says Frank. "Our discussions with the solar cooker factory owners indicate that full-scale production could begin in summer 2009," although that may depend on the results of the field testing and any modifications that result.

And beyond that, he says, "we will be continuing with our other projects in the area: water and air-quality analysis, bilingual science book publications, and testing novel locally appropriate renewable electricity generation techniques, for which we are currently applying for patents."

A version of this article appeared in MIT Tech Talk on June 4, 2008 (download PDF).

 

 
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