Construct 150 fuel-efficient stoves in Guatemala

Summary

Build 150 fuel-efficient stoves to alleviate serious respiratory infections and other diseases that affect women and children while reducing firewood extraction from vital forests. project reportread updates from the field

Today Only 3/16 - Donations To This Project Are Being Matched Up To $1,000 Per Person!Today Only 3/16 - Donations To This Project Are Being Matched Up To $1,000 Per Person!

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More Information About this Project

Project Needs and Beneficiaries

Smoke from traditional stoves threatens the health of women and children, and is one of the leading causes of death in the developing world. These stoves also require greater firewood consumption, resulting in the degradation of critical tropical forests. EcoLogic will work with participating families living near the community forest of Totonicapán to build fuel-efficient stoves, reducing respiratory illness in the home and conserving forests by reducing the demand for firewood.

Activities

EcoLogic will purchase materials to build fuel efficient stoves and provides training on how to install the stoves in homes around communities in Totonicapán. EcoLogic also facilitates learning exchanges between beneficiary communities.

Funding Information

Total Funding Received to Date: $4,225
Remaining Goal to be Funded: $15,775
Total Funding Goal: $20,000

Additional Documentation

This project has provided additional documentation in a Microsoft Word file (projdoc.doc).

Resources

Why this Project is Important

Potential Long Term Impact

In addition to health benefits for individual families, we hope to conserve forests by reducing firewood consumption in Totonicapán. Training and empowering the communities will help ensure long-term sustainable management of their natural resources.

Project Message

“We suffered a lot when we prepared food and maintained the fire using our traditional stove. Plus, we carry our infants, which exposed them to the dangerous smoke and caused them to be sick.”
- Diego Garcia family, San Mateo, Ixtatan, Family of 14 who benefited from an EcoLogic stove

Who is Running This Project

Contact

Gina Rindfleisch
Staff member
Gina Rindfleisch
25 Mt. Auburn Street
Cambridge, MA 02138
United States
617-441-6300
Email:

Project Sponsor

Gina Rindfleisch

Organization

EcoLogic Development Fund
25 Mount Auburn St. Suite 203
Cambridge, MA 2138
United States
617-441-6300
http://www.ecologic.org

Where this Project is Located

Country

This project is located in GuatemalaGuatemala and can also be found under EnvironmentEnvironment.

For more information about Guatemala, read the Human Development Report on Guatemala or the Wikipedia entry for Guatemala.

When this Project was Updated

Last Updated

This project was last updated on February 5, 2010.

Date Added to GlobalGiving

This project was added to the GlobalGiving project catalog on April 14, 2009

Latest Update from the Field

Fuel-Efficient Stove update!

By Gina Rindfleisch - Program Officer, February 05, 2010 03:13 PM

Thanks to everyone for supporting our fuel-efficient stove project in Guatemala! So far, we have raised $4,190 through Global Giving.

Currently, EcoLogic is working with the Northern Border Municipalities Alliance, a group of five municipalities in northwestern Guatemala. In the community of Santa Maria Dolores in Ixcán, EcoLogic worked with the community to identify 48 families each of which has received the tools to build fuel-efficient stoves. The families were chosen because of their strong commitment to protecting forests and water. By using fuel-efficient stoves that reduce firewood use, these families are collectively saving over 575 trees and protecting over 2.75 acres of forest every year.

Trees are not only saved by the use of the stoves, but in addition, each family agreed to establish an agroforestry plot nearly half an acre in size. Agroforestry is an agricultural method which integrates trees and shrubs alongside crops. This in turn reduces soil erosion, provides a source of organic fertilizer from fallen leaves, maintains a healthy climate for crops, and creates a habitat for local pollinators. By creating these plots, these families provide themselves with firewood from trimming the branches of the trees and shrubs. In addition, agroforestry increases the yield of crops such as basic grains. Moreover, the natural benefits of trees reduce the time and labor required of farmers, freeing them to spend more time with their families and communities.

Alba Urizar, a recipient of a stove explained that at first, the community was able to get firewood from trees that grew right outside of their homes. Now, because they have cleared so much land, they walk for more than a half hour to get firewood. She also said that the traditional stoves “used a lot of firewood, the smoke is hurtful for the children and adults, and the women burned their hands when cooking.” Thanks to her new stove, Alba feels a renewed sense of energy in her life because she no longer breathes in harmful smoke or burns her hands.

It is rewarding to see the effects that fuel-efficient stoves are having not only on individual families but the community as a whole. We are excited to continue expanding the stove program in Santa Maria Dolores and in other areas as well. Thank you for making this work possible!

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