I think the maximum you can grow, if the land is totally dedicated to tree 
growth and fire wood production is about 20 tons per hectare per year.  

Our Maasai women use about two tons of wood a year each, and that is with a 
pretty good stove.  before our stove they were using 5 tons per year for each 
house.  

so on a hectare of dedicated wood growing land, we could grow the wood for 10 
houses.

this may seem discouraging.  not many rural areas can afford to set aside tree 
growing space like this.  I know the Maasai can't.  



-----Original Message-----
From: Kevin <[email protected]>
To: Discussion of biomass cooking stoves <[email protected]>
Sent: Wed, Nov 13, 2013 2:29 pm
Subject: Re: [Stoves] Making smoke in 2013?



Dear Teddy

----- Original Message ----- 
From: Cookswell Jikos 
To: Discussion of biomass cooking stoves 
Sent: Wednesday, November 13, 2013 5:14 AM
Subject: Re: [Stoves] Making smoke in 2013?


Hi All,  


Would anybody be able to clarify from an emissions standpoint, (and honestly I 
am not sure I understand it completely) is wood smoke is 'food' for tree's?
 
# The first thing to do is define "smoke". :-) While "pyrolysis products" may 
be beneficial for seed treatment or insect control, I am guessing that the 
quantity, distribution and lack of permanence of "pyrolysis products 
distributed as a result of poor combustion" would likely have a minimil 
beneficial or detrimental effect on plant growth.
 
# The "products of complete combustion" of biomass are basically CO2 and water 
vapour. Additional CO2 in the atmosphere will be beneficial to plant growth 
only if existing CO2 levels were the constraint to plant growth. I am guessing 
that this is seldom the case... the limiting factors are probably more likely 
to be Sunlight, Moisture, and Nutrients.
 
 If so, take my small stove business - if I sell 100 stoves in a month that in 
total will use say - 1 ton of biomass (charcoal so perhaps 7 tons of wood). How 
many tree's would myself and my customers need to plant every month to not only 
achieve a positive feedback loop of increased biomass but be able to 100% 
reduce the emissions produced? 
 
# The number of trees you need to support a stove depends on the "Mean Annual 
Increment of Growth" for the trees being used for fuel. For example, if heating 
my home requires 5 cords of wood per year, and the "Mean annual increment" for 
spruce trees is 1 cord per acre per year, then I would need an area of 5 acres 
to grow the trees required to heat my home with no net increase or decrease of 
the wood on my woodlot. If the woodlot is managed in a sustainable manner, then 
it is unlikely that "re-planting" will be required, in that the trees will 
naturally "re-seed" the harvested areas, or, depending on the species, the 
trees will send up clones from their roots. Note that if one is not using 
"Sustainable Management Practises, there will never be a gain in wood 
availability, no matter how many trees are planted.


Is this even possible? I feel very strongly that woodfuel stove manufacturers 
and users should be responsible for replanting, growing and advocating tree 
planting as a future source of renewable energy, if only for our own job 
security. I am also very interested in finding out how one can actually measure 
the number of tree's needed to be grown compared to the number of stoves in 
use? (especially if the woodlot is managed under a pruning/coppicing regime).
 
# It is not that difficult. You need to know the amount of wood consumed per 
year per stove, and the "Mean Annual Increment" of growth for the tree species 
being grown in the particular area, and the percentage of the "Mean Annual 
Increment" (MAI)  that actually gets used as fuel. For example, if the MAI is 1 
cord per acre per year, and if half the wood is sold off as logs, then 2 acres 
would be required to yield 1 cord of fuel wood.


many thanks for any thoughts, 
 
# I hope this is helpful.
 
Best wishes,
 
Kevin


Teddy 




Cookswell Jikos
www.cookswell.co.ke
www.facebook.com/CookswellJikos
www.kenyacharcoal.blogspot.com
Mobile: +254 700 380 009 

Mobile: +254 700 905 913
P.O. Box 1433, Nairobi 00606, Kenya














On Mon, Nov 11, 2013 at 7:17 PM, Crispin Pemberton-Pigott 
<[email protected]> wrote:

Dear Paul

I find this sentence odd so perhaps you can explain it a little further:


>And TLUDs are not intended to be charcoal burners.


I am not sure this is true. The TLUD's used in the Ulaanbaatar clean air
programme are definitely intended to burn char and they do it very well.
More than 100,000 of them have been sold just in that city.

I am drawing a distinction between the devices that burn high and low carbon
fuels, basically. I hear you saying that biomass burning TLUD's aren't
designed to burn char but that is the choice of the designer, not a
'feature' of TLUD's. If you change the superficial velocity of the air
supply it changes from one to the other.

Is it possible that here are more TLUD's burning char (high carbon) than
there are TLUD's making it? It would be interesting if that was the case,
right?

I know there are reasons provided for making and saving the char and a whole
enthusiast sector devoted to the matter, however it would be unfortunate if
the acronym TLUD was tied to only one form of combustion, while the world
merrily went ahead with two.

What are your thoughts on this?

Thanks
Crispin




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