Dear Boston
You are of course quite right. There was no decision. Years and years of trying have shown that people will not buy a $10 stove in most African countries because it is too expensive. So..people came up with the idea of a $5 stove, like a good 5 cent cigar it is what people were supposed to want. It is hard to make a JIKO for less than $10 because of the metal cost. That is why the POCA in Maputo is made from ceramic. An All ceramic stove has the possibility of being cheap and strong and long lasting. While most ceramic stoves do not last long, or are not good enough to get hot enough to not last long, if you get my drift, it is technically possible to have the best of both worlds, but not in metal. In reality people will buy a much more expensive stove than $10 but it has to be very attractive and effective. Most stoves chattered about here are prototypes, not commercial products. Commercial success is also elusive even if the product is good. The stove has to fit the intended market niche. You are correct: there is no universal stove or universal price. Regards Crispin All, In the column, Dr. Smith does not reference his $10 price-limit. I have heard this value several times and no one seems to know why $10 was deemed appropriate. I've been digging and cannot find the source of this "decision". Does anyone have further information? In my opinion, its extremely naive to cast a blanket price for all hh stoves around the world. Cheers, Boston Nyer
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