Solar-powered cooker wins $75,000 in the FT Climate Change Challenge
A solar-powered cardboard cooker, which aims to transform the lives of hundreds of millions of villagers in developing countries, is the winner of a $75,000 prize in a global competition for innovation to tackle climate change.
The Kyoto Box is targeted at the two billion people who use firewood for cooking, and has the potential to deliver huge environmental and social benefits. “We’re saving lives and saving trees,“ says Kenya-based entrepreneur Jon Bøhmer. “I doubt if there is any other technology that can make so much impact for so little money.”
Bøhmer believes it could halve the need for firewood, saving an estimated two tonnes of carbon per family per year, as well as freeing women and children from the health risks of inhaling smoke from the cooking fires.
Bøhmer’s innovation emerged triumphant in the FT Climate Change Challenge, backed by the Financial Times, sustainable development organisation Forum for the Future, and technology giant HP, which sponsored the prize. Its aim: to identify and publicise innovations which can be developed and scaled up rapidly to make the greatest contribution to tackling climate change.
Kyoto Energy is a real family affair. Bøhmer, a Norwegian, set it up with his Kenyan wife Neema, and has used his own money to fund the project. His father has mobilised support back in Norway and his five-year-old daughter Amina even helped build the prototype.
The Kyoto Box uses the greenhouse effect to boil and bake. It consists of two boxes, one inside the other, with an acrylic cover, which lets the sun’s power in and traps it. Black paint on the inner box and silver foil on the outer help concentrate the heat, while a layer of straw or newspaper between the two provides insulation.
Bøhmer plans to use the prize-money to conduct mass trials in ten countries, including South Africa, India and Indonesia, and gather data to back an application for carbon credits.
Carbon credits are the crucial element which will make the project scalable, he explains. They will more than cover the cost of manufacturing the boxes, and the surplus will fund production of a suite of other products which offer solar-powered solutions for villagers in the developing world: a torch, a plastic bag which cleans water by heating it, and a smokeless biomass cookstove.
But he’s quick to point out that this isn’t a charity. “We’re going to make money on this. This is a whole new kind of business. I think Grameen [the celebrated microfinance institution which offers affordable credit to individuals and communities in Bangladesh] has proven that there’s interesting business at the bottom of the pyramid.”
He plans to distribute the Kyoto Box free on condition that families use them, and aims to work with women’s groups in each community. “This is all about women," he says. "Women are the ones who are fetching firewood, doing the cooking and who are responsible for the energy supply in the household.”
Having developed a more robust, longer-lasting cooker in corrugated plastic, Bøhmer plans to produce 10,000 to use in the trials. He says they can be mass-produced in existing factories as cheaply as the cardboard prototype. Publicity from the competition has already generated opportunities for his venture, says Bøhmer, and they have been contacted by a number of companies and academic institutions interested in their work.
Nearly 300 projects from around the world entered the FT Climate Change Challenge. The Kyoto Box was chosen as winner by FT readers, in conjunction with a distinguished panel of business leaders and climate change experts. The runners up were Mootral – a feed additive to cut methane produced by ruminants – and an indoor cooling system developed by Loughborough University to halve the energy use of air-conditioning systems.
Peter Madden, chief executive of the Forum, said that the finalists demonstrate “the vital role of green innovation in tackling climate change”. He expressed the hope that publicity from the competition would help speed their route to market, adding, “The Kyoto Box has the potential to transform millions of lives and is a model of scalable, sustainable innovation”. – Anna Simpson
For more details about the finalists and the competition click here.
9 April 2009
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Eh?
This is not a new invention. Children have been making these for years as school projects.
What annoys me most is, not only has this man taken prize money for an invention that already exists, but he intends to profit from its manufacture.
As PT Barnum said " there's one born every minute"
Suckered on a grand scale.
Shame.
Re Climate Change Competition winner - clarification
Thanks for all the comments regarding the Kyoto Box winning the FT Climate Challenge Competition. There have been a few posts pointing out that the solar-powered oven is not a new idea. The point of the competition was not to reward a eureka moment but to help an innovative approach to climate change reach the market. As Kyoto Energy founder and competition-winner Jon Bøhmer acknowledges in his company literature and on his application, the concept of solar cooking has been around since the eighteenth century.
There are other versions of solar cookers available on the web and there are also detailed explanations of how to make a version of a similar device. What distinguishes this approach is that the cooker will be mass-produced cheaply in existing factories, the finished item is to be flat-packed for bulk transportation to end users and is extremely cheap at $6.
The $75,000 prize money is going to enable Kyoto Energy to test durable, plastic versions of the cooker with 10,000 people currently burning fossil fuels to clean their water and heat their food. The expert judges and the thousands of members of the public who voted for the Kyoto Box agreed that this simple idea offered the best opportunity amongst the five short-listed ideas for an innovation to help tackle climate change on a big scale.
Please see the press release (http://www.forumforthefuture.org/solar-powered-cooker-wins-75000) and our site for more information on the competition and its objectives.
Shannon Carr-Shand, Forum for the Future