Maybe some of us can "collaborate" once we are no longer worried about feeding 
our children.............we the 99% are happy to share our expertise, but we 
also need to eat...sorry!

Date: Mon, 21 Nov 2011 08:44:54 +0700
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Stoves] What poor means?

Phil,

It is possible to build cook stoves with doing damage to children and the 
environment.
I work with an organization in Vietnam dedicated to cleaner production 
techniques.
Your concerns here are not a problem.

But I would want to collaborate with experts who do not need to make money 
through the sale of cook stoves.

Thanks.
Paul

On Mon, Nov 21, 2011 at 6:34 AM, Fireside Hearth 
<[email protected]> wrote:








Date: Mon, 21 Nov 2011 06:06:42 +0700
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]

Subject: Re: [Stoves] What poor means?

I suggest:
that we collaborate in coming up with some of the best designs of cook stoves 
for particular forms of biomass;that we look for countries uniquely positioned 
to fabricate at the most competitive prices; While not tolerating child slave 
labor or environmental rape


that we use the highest quality materials in our fabrication;that we employ 
some of the most advanced mass production techniques; Only if there are green 
in all ways

that we buy in large quantities to further reduce price;

that we sell at cost, or perhaps below cost, to the poor;that we operate with 
total transparency in making known our fabrication costs;
that we ask the rich to voluntarily pay more to subsidize the sale to the poor.

The effort to provide good cook stoves does not have to be a money-making 
endeavor. Sorry, but I don't believe that there is not a way to do both. My 
families future depends
on making money through this. We also wish to support our failing schools with 
this money.

It could easily become a world-wide collaborative effort involving many people 
on this stove list. YES!

Thanks.
Paul Olivier


On Mon, Nov 21, 2011 at 3:13 AM, Dean Still <[email protected]> wrote:


Hi Phil,

I think that if we factor in the ill health and climate change caused by 
incomplete combustion of biomass, society as a whole saves money by subsidizing 
the 50% fuel reduction and 90% emission reduction cooking stove. However, as 
Bryan Wilson points out in his presentations, the bottom of the pyramid 
consumer is not motivated to pay for these improvements.




My hope is that someone will be smart enough and stubborn enough to manufacture 
a market driven stove that meets the 50% and 90% level of performance. And, the 
necessary push to accomplish this difficult task would be very much assisted by 
a firm order for 1 million stoves from some motivated funder who also locates 
and secures the distribution network.




Making the 50% and 90% stove is the relatively easy part. I would guess that 
the commercial distribution side is 10 times harder. I can imagine distributing 
100 million stoves by selling at the market price to cooks who then use the 
stoves and the funder makes the money back on the carbon credits. 




 I hear that Envirofit is doing something along these lines?

All Best,

Dean

On Sun, Nov 20, 2011 at 9:58 AM, Phil Hughes <[email protected]> wrote:



The $2/day number can clearly mean very different things in different places. I 
live in rural Nicaragua and can offer some data that at least fits here. And 
here is a place where fuel-efficient stoves really are needed.




For those with work, $2/day is the going wage. There are lots of people who 
seldom work so $2/day/family in this area as far as cash income is pretty high. 
That said, most people have enough land to grow much of what they eat and few 
have any debts.




The cash gets spent on batteries for radios, cooking oil, salt, sugar, rice and 
minimally on clothing. That's really about it. But, having no savings and 
living day-to-day on what they have is typical. That is, if they had a good 
week they might buy batteries for the radio but, if not, just not listen to it.




Health care and education are free so they are non-issues (for pretty low 
quality for each). That pretty well defines rural life here.
Telling someone they can reduce fuel consumption by 50%, get rid of smoke in 
the house and such is not going to compute if an investment is needed. They 
will walk farther to cut wood for cooking and pretend the smoke is a non-issue. 
Thus, these people are unlikely to get excited about "something better" if an 
investment is needed.




What will work is if they can go to a workshop showing them how to make a stove 
using mud and something that is available as scrap or given to them. Beyond 
that, good luck.
-- 



Phil Hughes 

[email protected]






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-- 
Paul A. Olivier PhD
27C Pham Hong Thai Street
Dalat
Vietnam

Louisiana telephone: 1-337-447-4124 (rings Vietnam)
Mobile: 090-694-1573 (in Vietnam)


Skype address: Xpolivier
http://www.esrla.com/


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-- 
Paul A. Olivier PhD
27C Pham Hong Thai Street
Dalat
Vietnam

Louisiana telephone: 1-337-447-4124 (rings Vietnam)
Mobile: 090-694-1573 (in Vietnam)

Skype address: Xpolivier
http://www.esrla.com/


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