|
'Cardboard Cooker' Wins Climate Prize
A new solar-powered
cooker fashioned from cardboard boxes has won a prize that
will fund its manufacture for use across the developing world.
The "Kyoto
Box" consists of two cardboard boxes one inside
the other with an acrylic lid that traps heat from
the sun, acting as a hob. Black paint, foil and insulation
work together to raise the temperature to the boiling point
of water. The cooker was chosen as the winner of the Financial
Times Climate Change Challenge by a panel of judges and members
of the public.
Jon Bøhmer,
the cooker's inventor, says that the secret to the Kyoto Box's
success lies in its simplicity. "There are too few people
looking at simple research. We need the basic stuff too."
Bøhmer
has been awarded US$75,000 to develop the cookers, which costs
just US$5 to make, can be manufactured in existing cardboard
factories and will be given away for free.
A more robust
corrugated plastic version has been developed that costs the
same and is ready to be tested in ten countries.
Both versions
could save up to two tonnes of carbon emissions per family
per year, and Bøhmer is hoping that the Kyoto Box will
be eligible for carbon credits hence its name.
Source: SciDev Net
Date: 14 April 2009

|