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[[File:Solar_Cooking_Kozon_05-17.png|thumb|none|420px|Photo credit: [[Solar Cooking KoZon]]]]
 
[[File:Solar_Cooking_Kozon_05-17.png|thumb|none|420px|Photo credit: [[Solar Cooking KoZon]]]]
[[Togo Tilé]] established a self-supporting solar cooker business is Mali with a grant from [[Solar Cooking KoZon]] in 2014. In 2017 and after extensive analysis of the business, Togo Tilé was selected by a government program intended to stimulate private enterprise in Mali. A business expansion plan was established. Togo Tilé now reports that they have a thriving business with 30 staff members, five points of sale nationwide, and an average monthly business volume of 9,000.
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[[Togo Tilé]] established a self-supporting solar cooker business is Mali with a grant from [[Solar Cooking KoZon]] in 2014. In 2017 and after extensive analysis of the business, Togo Tilé was selected by a government program intended to stimulate private enterprise in Mali. A business expansion plan was established. Togo Tilé now reports that they have a thriving business with 30 staff members, five points of sale nationwide, and an average monthly business volume of EUR 9,000.
 
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==Events==
 
==Events==
 
{{{{PAGENAME}}Events}}
 
{{{{PAGENAME}}Events}}
 
{{CalendarAndPastEvents}}
 
{{CalendarAndPastEvents}}
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=={{FeaturedProjectTitle}}==
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[[File:Togo_Tile_market_stall_2016.jpg|thumb|300px|[[Togo Tilé]]s products for sale at a local market. ''Photo credit: [[Solar Cooking KoZon]]'']]
  +
*{{NewFeb18}}'''Continued success for solar cooking business in Mali''' - In 2014, [[Solar Cooking KoZon]] granted [[Togo Tilé]], a Mali-based solar cooking business run by Seydou Coulibaly, an initial subsidy of EUR 13,300. Two years later, it was an established business with 30 staff members, five points of sale nationwide, and an average monthly business volume of EUR 9,000. Helping the environment, is an important message presented at sales demonstrations and at schools and universities. For Togo Tilé, a contribution to the environment does not end with the sale of the product, as they continue to support and follow-up with their customers.
  +
{{SignificantProjectLink}}
   
 
=={{HeadingNews}}==
 
=={{HeadingNews}}==
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*{{NewMay19}}'''May 2019:''' The production of solar cooking products by [[Togo Tilé]] is still going very well. In the first half of 2018, the monthly turnover was around EURO 1800. In that period, Togo Tilé sold 4,737 [[heat-retention cooker]]s, 499 [[solar box]]es, 45 [[Water Pasteurization Indicator]]s, 37 large [[parabolic solar cooker]]s, 432 {{Cat|Improved combustion stoves}}, 421 solar lighters, but only 32 [[CooKit]]s. There is much more demand for CooKits. Due to a shortage in supplies in polypropylene bags, Togo Tilé was unable to supply CooKits for a long time. The stock of bags has been replenished by [[Solar Cooking KoZon]] and sales of CooKits have increased again.
  +
  +
*{{NewApr18}}'''April 2018:''' [[Togo Tilé]]'s new workshop and ICS-shop in Segou is now ready and will be officially opened this month. There are 80 employees, all young and mostly women selling products in 17 locations throughout Mali.
   
 
[[File:Solar_Cooking_Kozon_05-17.png|thumb|right|350px|Photo credit: [[Solar Cooking KoZon]]]]
 
[[File:Solar_Cooking_Kozon_05-17.png|thumb|right|350px|Photo credit: [[Solar Cooking KoZon]]]]
*{{NewMay17}}'''May 2017:''' '''Solar Cooking KoZon (SCK) stimulates ISC private enterprises''' - In 2014, [[Solar Cooking KoZon]] granted [[Togo Tilé]], a Mali-based solar cooking business run by Seydou Coulibaly, an initial subsidy of €13,300. Two years later, it’s a thriving business with 30 staff members, five points of sale nationwide and an average monthly business volume of €4,000. The environment constitutes an important incentive; at sales demonstrations, at schools and universities, close attention is paid to the environmental aspects of solar cooking. For Seydou a contribution to the environment does not end with the sale of the product. Togo Tilé continues to support its customers for some time after the sale, to ensure that the products are truly integrated in daily cooking, to provide a lasting positive contribution to the environment. After extensive analysis of the business, Togo Tilé was selected by a government program intended to focus on stimulating private enterprise in Mali. A business expansion plan was established that included the construction of a bigger workshop and the acquisition of a saw and a welding machine. [http://solarcookingkozon.nl/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/newsletterDec2016.pdf More information...]
+
*{{NewMay17}}'''May 2017:''' '''Solar Cooking KoZon (SCK) stimulates ISC private enterprises''' - In 2014, [[Solar Cooking KoZon]] granted [[Togo Tilé]], a Mali-based solar cooking business run by Seydou Coulibaly, an initial subsidy of EUR 13,300. Two years later, it’s a thriving business with 30 staff members, five points of sale nationwide and an average monthly business volume of €4,000. The environment constitutes an important incentive; at sales demonstrations, at schools and universities, close attention is paid to the environmental aspects of solar cooking. For Seydou a contribution to the environment does not end with the sale of the product. Togo Tilé continues to support its customers for some time after the sale, to ensure that the products are truly integrated in daily cooking, to provide a lasting positive contribution to the environment. After extensive analysis of the business, Togo Tilé was selected by a government program intended to focus on stimulating private enterprise in Mali. A business expansion plan was established that included the construction of a bigger workshop and the acquisition of a saw and a welding machine. [http://solarcookingkozon.nl/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/newsletterDec2016.pdf More information...]
   
 
[[File:Togo_Tile'_solar_cookers_for_sale,_9-29-16.png|thumb|300px|[[Solar box cooker]]s available for sale at [[Togo Tilé]]. ''Photo credit: Solar Cooking KoZon'']]
 
[[File:Togo_Tile'_solar_cookers_for_sale,_9-29-16.png|thumb|300px|[[Solar box cooker]]s available for sale at [[Togo Tilé]]. ''Photo credit: Solar Cooking KoZon'']]
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*'''January 2015: Only the cooking food is out in the sun at this Mali school''' - [[Stephan Zech]], with [[Sun and Ice]], posted this photo of a mid-day meal being prepared at a school in Mali.
 
*'''January 2015: Only the cooking food is out in the sun at this Mali school''' - [[Stephan Zech]], with [[Sun and Ice]], posted this photo of a mid-day meal being prepared at a school in Mali.
 
[[File:SDC11500.jpg|thumb|300px|[[World Vision Mali]] trains students to use various type of solar cookers.]]
 
[[File:SDC11500.jpg|thumb|300px|[[World Vision Mali]] trains students to use various type of solar cookers.]]
*'''February 2013:''' [[Gnibouwa Diassana]] reports that [[World Vision Mali]] continues to be committed to training members of the community in Bla, including children, to solar cook. Instruction involves using various types of solar cookers. Besides being introduced to the technology, workshop participants practice local food recipes, bake cakes and bread with papaya, and learn to use their solar cookers to can mangos. He reminds us that solar applications are a simple solution for a complex problem.
 
 
[[File:KoZon_Mali_November_2012.jpg|right|300px]]
 
*'''November 2012: A successful project on integrated solar cooking in Ségou''' - In 2009, [[KoZon]], a Dutch NGO promoting solar cooking in the Sahel, and [[AFIMA]], a Malian NGO promoting the development of rural women, began a joint project in Ségou, a region of Mali where solar cookers had not been introduced. In five villages (Dioro, Babougou, Koila Bamanan, Kominé, Soké), they trained four groups of 25 women (selected by the village chiefs) in the practice of [[integrated cooking]]. They received kits containing: two [[CooKit]]s, to cook meals when the sun shines; a [[fuel-efficient woodstove]], for use when there’s no sun; and a [[heat-retention cooker]] to allow even more food to be cooked in the first two. In addition to a short hands-on training workshop, the project ensured that all participants were visited several times after the course to solve problems, and provide extra tips, and encouragement. In the final evaluation, in May 2012, external experts established that more than 80% of the participants--in some villages nearly 100%--used these technologies daily. As intended, they are now saving some 1,800 tons of fuel wood per year. The evaluators also found that many women appreciate having more free time each day, since they do not have to tend a fire when solar cooking or using the heat-retention cooker. They use their time for other activities including running small businesses. Buying less firewood also saves them a lot of money. It’s no surprise that the evaluators spoke of integrated cooking as a great means of relieving poverty!
 
   
 
{{OldNewsLink}}
 
{{OldNewsLink}}
   
 
=={{HeadingHistory}}==
 
=={{HeadingHistory}}==
The Sahelian nation of Mali is the site of several solar cooking projects.
 
[[Desertification]] is of course an immense problem in this part of Africa. Only 10% of the land has any forest cover, and deforestation continues to occur. As in other areas, clearing land for agriculture and grazing is assumed to be the principal reason for the forests' decline, but there is also recognition that over 70% of wood production is used for cooking. Solar cooking offers one way to stem this unwanted development in Mali.
 
 
Researchers at the University of Torino, studying the problem, have experimented
 
with a wide range of fuel-saving devices, dryers, water heaters, solar lighting panels, and solar cookers. (As one researcher said-, "Every day when I get up (and look at the sun), I see all that energy going to waste.) Considerable study done under the auspices of the University, with joint efforts of the Faculty of Agricultural Science and the Interdepartmental Centre of Women's Studies, has included surveys, interviews, and field analyses of both problems and some suggested solutions. Local associations promote various fuel saving devices, such as metal stoves or parabolic cookers; other promote solar cooking (see below for an example). But in a nation without adequate communication channels (television or daily newspapers) and a population with only a 35% literacy rate, spreading new technology is difficult. Radio broadcasting is thought to be the most promising dissemination media. Most important in this situation is the awareness of the problem and the willingness to seek solutions.
 
 
One single person, [[Gnibouwa Diassana]], long committed to solar cooking, has
 
managed in these circumstances to make and sell around 50 cookers of the wooden box
 
type. He does this on his own, without assistance even from the NGO for which he works on other kinds of projects. This sole person, working only with a son, has a promotion plan for an energy week and even a business plan that would permit expanded production of solar box cookers. He hopes to find partners among women's organizations but knows that resistance to change, and rigid gender based roles, make it difficult for women to pursue the purchase of cookers. He is however a determined man and perseveres in his work. (Pictures and story, [http://solarcooking.org/newsletters/scrmar03.htm Solar Cooker Review, March 2003]).
 
 
Another project created by an individual is the work of Lanseri Niare, who has
 
been introducing box cookers, both by teaching people how to build their own cooker
 
and how to use the box when built. Major problems encountered in this project have been glass breakage, termites if the box is used on the ground, and the Harmattan period (a severe windy season) which brings much dust, so that even when sunny, cooking is difficult) ([http://solarcooking.org/newsletters/scrdec98.htm Solar Cooker Review, Dec. 98]).
 
 
One other project, which has proven successful in Mali, operates under the
 
auspices of the [[KoZon Foundation]], a Dutch organization that works through the western African Sahelian nations. From a beginning in Burkina Faso (see above), the efforts of KoZon and its dedicated volunteer [[Wietske Jongbloed]], have introduced [[CooKit]]s in Mali since 2001. Wietzke operates at a very grassroots level, taking cookers (mostly using [[CooKit]]s made in the Sahel to keep cost low) to marketplaces for demonstrations. The [[CooKit]]s themselves were initially imported from abroad, and then purchased from Burkina Faso. This operation, relatively new, has not yet been evaluated by KoZon, but is gradually moving forward, in cooperation with the [[Association des Femmes Ingénieurs du Mali]].
 
   
 
The Sahelian nation of Mali has been the site of several solar cooking projects.
''[Information for this section was taken originally from [[Media:sam.pdf|State of the Art of Solar Cooking]] by Dr. [[Barbara Knudson]]]''
 
 
[[Desertification]] continues to be an immense problem in this part of Africa. It was reported only 10% of the land has any forest cover, and deforestation has continued to occur. As in other areas, clearing land for agriculture and grazing was assumed to be the principal reason for the forests' decline, but there was also recognition that over 70% of wood production was used for cooking. Solar cooking offers one way to stem this unwanted development in Mali.
{{ArchivedPagesForHistory}}
 
  +
{{SubSection|University of Torino}}
 
Researchers at the University of Torino, studying the problem, experimented with a wide range of fuel-saving devices, dryers, water heaters, solar lighting panels, and solar cookers. (As one researcher said-, "Every day when I get up (and look at the sun), I see all that energy going to waste.) Considerable study done under the auspices of the University, with joint efforts of the Faculty of Agricultural Science and the Interdepartmental Centre of Women's Studies, has included surveys, interviews, and field analyses of both problems and some suggested solutions. Local associations promoted various fuel saving devices. But in a nation without adequate communication channels (television or daily newspapers) and a population with only a 35% literacy rate, spreading new technology has been difficult. Radio broadcasting was thought to be the most promising dissemination media. Most important in this situation was the awareness of the problem, and the willingness to seek solutions.
  +
{{SubSection|Gnibouwa Diassana}}
 
One single person, [[Gnibouwa Diassana]], long committed to solar cooking,
 
managed in these circumstances to make and sell [[solar box cookers]]. He did this on his own, without assistance even from the NGO he has worked with on other types of projects. This sole person, working only with his son, had a promotion plan for an energy week and even a business plan that would permit expanded production of solar box cookers. He hoped to find partners among women's organizations, but he knew tabout resistance to change, and rigid gender based roles, making it difficult for women to pursue the purchase of cookers. He was however a determined man, until he passed away in 2017. Pictures and story, [http://solarcooking.org/newsletters/scrmar03.htm Solar Cooker Review, March 2003]).
  +
{{SubSection|Lanseri Niare}}
 
A project created by an individual was the work of Lanseri Niare, who introduced box cookers, both by teaching people how to build their own cooker and how to use the box when built. Major problems encountered in this project were glass breakage, termites if the box was used on the ground, and the Harmattan period (a severe windy season), which brought so much dust, that even when sunny, cooking was difficult) ([http://solarcooking.org/newsletters/scrdec98.htm Solar Cooker Review, Dec. 98]).
  +
{{SubSection|KoZon Foundation}}
 
One other project, which has proven successful in Mali, operated under the
 
auspices of the [[KoZon Foundation]], a Dutch organization that has been involved in the western African Sahelian nations. From a beginning in Burkina Faso (see above), the efforts of KoZon and its dedicated volunteer [[Wietske Jongbloed]], have introduced [[CooKit]]s in Mali since 2001. Wietzke has operated at a very grassroots level, taking cookers (mostly using [[CooKit]]s made in the Sahel to keep cost low) to marketplaces for demonstrations. The [[CooKit]]s themselves were initially imported from abroad, and then purchased from Burkina Faso. This operation, relatively new, has not yet been evaluated by KoZon, but gradually movied forward, in cooperation with the [[Association des Femmes Ingénieurs du Mali]].
 
{{ArchivedPagesForHistory}
 
=={{HeadingClimateCulture}}==
 
=={{HeadingClimateCulture}}==
 
A 2010 report from Mali’s agriculture ministry said that more than 500,000 hectares of forest are cleared for firewood and charcoal each year in the West African country. But new ways of cooking, using solar power and [[heat-retention cooker]]s, could cut those losses.<ref>http://www.trust.org/item/?map=women-engineers-promote-low-carbon-cooking-across-mali</ref>
 
A 2010 report from Mali’s agriculture ministry said that more than 500,000 hectares of forest are cleared for firewood and charcoal each year in the West African country. But new ways of cooking, using solar power and [[heat-retention cooker]]s, could cut those losses.<ref>http://www.trust.org/item/?map=women-engineers-promote-low-carbon-cooking-across-mali</ref>
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J.P. Martin-Vallas concluded that imported parabolic-type solar cookers are currently too expensive for most Malians. One way to lower prices, he says, would be to import bulk aluminum sheets and cut panels on site.
 
J.P. Martin-Vallas concluded that imported parabolic-type solar cookers are currently too expensive for most Malians. One way to lower prices, he says, would be to import bulk aluminum sheets and cut panels on site.
   
The following chart shows some sample annual firewood expenditures for households of 10 people. (Note: 500 CFAs is approximately US $1.) <br>
+
The following chart shows some sample annual firewood expenditures for households of 10 people. (Note: In 2005, 500 CFAs was approximately USD $1.) <br>
   
 
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<table border="1">
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===Articles in the media===
 
===Articles in the media===
 
*'''February 2012:''' [http://www.trust.org/alertnet/news/women-engineers-promote-low-carbon-cooking-across-mali Women engineers promote low-carbon cooking across Mali] - ''AlertNet''
 
 
*'''July 2004:''' [http://www.solarcooking.org/newsletters/scrjul04.htm#“Cooking_in_a_piece_of_cardboard_…_you_have_to_see_it_to_believe_it” "Cooking in a piece of cardboard … you have to see it to believe it"] - ''[[Wietske Jongbloed]]''
 
*'''July 2004:''' [http://www.solarcooking.org/newsletters/scrjul04.htm#“Cooking_in_a_piece_of_cardboard_…_you_have_to_see_it_to_believe_it” "Cooking in a piece of cardboard … you have to see it to believe it"] - ''[[Wietske Jongbloed]]''
   

Revision as of 22:29, 17 January 2020

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Last edited: 26 May 2019      
Solar Cooking Kozon 05-17

Photo credit: Solar Cooking KoZon

Togo Tilé established a self-supporting solar cooker business is Mali with a grant from Solar Cooking KoZon in 2014. In 2017 and after extensive analysis of the business, Togo Tilé was selected by a government program intended to stimulate private enterprise in Mali. A business expansion plan was established. Togo Tilé now reports that they have a thriving business with 30 staff members, five points of sale nationwide, and an average monthly business volume of EUR 9,000.

Events

Featured international events

SE for ALL forum logo 2024, 10-3-23
  • 4-6 June 2024 (Bridgetown, Barbados): Sustainable Energy for All Global Forum - The event will be co-hosted by Sustainable Energy for All (SEforALL) and the government of Barbados. It is a platform for government, business and finance leaders, entrepreneurs, and youth and community representatives from around the world to come together to broker new partnerships, spur new investment, and address challenges at the nexus of energy, climate, and development. More information...

Online events

Requests for proposal

  • Decentralized Renewable Energy Solutions utilizing Solar and Bio-Energy - Sustainable Energy Technologies and Assessments of ScienceDirect, is requesting guest-author submissions. The special issue, VSI: DRES is devoted to publishing research articles reporting the innovative designs and design interventions in solar thermal and bio-energy for decentralized energy systems (DES). It includes i) new and novel designs of prototype or commercial devices and technologies, their development, modeling and simulations and experimental validation; ii) innovations for processes, techniques, utilization, and applications; iii) novel use of materials for improving efficiency, performance, techno-economic feasibility, and sustainability and iv) research findings addressing the socio-economic, health and safety impacts, and life cycle assessments leading to proposing novel devices for DES. The Deadline for submission is 31 July 2024. More submittal information...
See also: Global Calendar of Events and past events in Mali

Most significant projects

Togo Tile market stall 2016

Togo Tilés products for sale at a local market. Photo credit: Solar Cooking KoZon

  • Continued success for solar cooking business in Mali - In 2014, Solar Cooking KoZon granted Togo Tilé, a Mali-based solar cooking business run by Seydou Coulibaly, an initial subsidy of EUR 13,300. Two years later, it was an established business with 30 staff members, five points of sale nationwide, and an average monthly business volume of EUR 9,000. Helping the environment, is an important message presented at sales demonstrations and at schools and universities. For Togo Tilé, a contribution to the environment does not end with the sale of the product, as they continue to support and follow-up with their customers.

News

  • April 2018: Togo Tilé's new workshop and ICS-shop in Segou is now ready and will be officially opened this month. There are 80 employees, all young and mostly women selling products in 17 locations throughout Mali.
Solar Cooking Kozon 05-17

Photo credit: Solar Cooking KoZon

  • May 2017: Solar Cooking KoZon (SCK) stimulates ISC private enterprises - In 2014, Solar Cooking KoZon granted Togo Tilé, a Mali-based solar cooking business run by Seydou Coulibaly, an initial subsidy of EUR 13,300. Two years later, it’s a thriving business with 30 staff members, five points of sale nationwide and an average monthly business volume of €4,000. The environment constitutes an important incentive; at sales demonstrations, at schools and universities, close attention is paid to the environmental aspects of solar cooking. For Seydou a contribution to the environment does not end with the sale of the product. Togo Tilé continues to support its customers for some time after the sale, to ensure that the products are truly integrated in daily cooking, to provide a lasting positive contribution to the environment. After extensive analysis of the business, Togo Tilé was selected by a government program intended to focus on stimulating private enterprise in Mali. A business expansion plan was established that included the construction of a bigger workshop and the acquisition of a saw and a welding machine. More information...
Togo Tile' solar cookers for sale, 9-29-16

Solar box cookers available for sale at Togo Tilé. Photo credit: Solar Cooking KoZon

  • September 2016: A sturdy solar box cooker developed by Henk Blok together with students of the Free University and the University of Amsterdam continues to be popular at the Togo Tilé retail store. Henk and Marjan Blok paid the start-up costs for the experiment with these boxes in Mali. Piet Sluimer, a member of the Techniques Work Group, has developed a cheaper cardboard solar box cooker (the smaller box on the right), which is also selling well.
KoZon Mali workshop in August 2016

Solar Cooking The Netherlands - KoZon provided solar cookers and hay baskets - Photo credit Solar Cooking KoZon

  • September 2016: Mali women with disabilities receive assistance with access to solar cooking - Sixty women from Bamako and Sikasso, Mali, attended a workshop organized by Solar Cooking The Netherlands - KoZon in August. With limited ability to gather wood for fuel, the solar cookers and hay baskets have reduced their wood use by 60 to 70%. Read more...
  • December 2015: Solar Cooking The Netherlands - KoZon reports: "We have carefully continued this trend in the latest project together with the Association des Femmes Ingénieurs du Mali (AFIMA) in Tiby, in the Segou area. Eight hundred and fifty Women have been trained. From this group, four cooperatives have been created. They were to continue as businesses that would disseminate solar cooking while being coached by AFIMA. However, our partner has decided that it prefers to continue with other charitable projects. We are therefore going our separate ways. We will have the new Renewable Energy Centre near Mbarara ISC, and information and promotion in Ethiopia for the time being. It is regrettable because AFIMA has been of great value in the dissemination of ISC in Mali. To ensure that the cooperatives will be able to continue, we are attempting to link them to the Togo Tilé project."
Braced Mali1

Photo credit: Braced

UNDP 1

Photo credit: United Nations Development Programme

  • June 2015: UNDP trains blacksmiths to build solar cookers - In its recently published Annual Report, the United Nations Development Program highlighted its program in rural Mali which trained local village blacksmiths to build solar cookers, solar dryers, and water heaters. Local residents also had solar panels installed on their homes. Roughly 30,000 people have reportedly benefited from this program. Read more...
Sun and Ice school cookers in Mali, 1-19-15

Mid-day meal being prepared at Mali school - Sun and Ice

  • January 2015: Only the cooking food is out in the sun at this Mali school - Stephan Zech, with Sun and Ice, posted this photo of a mid-day meal being prepared at a school in Mali.
SDC11500

World Vision Mali trains students to use various type of solar cookers.

See older news...

History

The Sahelian nation of Mali has been the site of several solar cooking projects. Desertification continues to be an immense problem in this part of Africa. It was reported only 10% of the land has any forest cover, and deforestation has continued to occur. As in other areas, clearing land for agriculture and grazing was assumed to be the principal reason for the forests' decline, but there was also recognition that over 70% of wood production was used for cooking. Solar cooking offers one way to stem this unwanted development in Mali.

University of Torino

Researchers at the University of Torino, studying the problem, experimented with a wide range of fuel-saving devices, dryers, water heaters, solar lighting panels, and solar cookers. (As one researcher said-, "Every day when I get up (and look at the sun), I see all that energy going to waste.) Considerable study done under the auspices of the University, with joint efforts of the Faculty of Agricultural Science and the Interdepartmental Centre of Women's Studies, has included surveys, interviews, and field analyses of both problems and some suggested solutions. Local associations promoted various fuel saving devices. But in a nation without adequate communication channels (television or daily newspapers) and a population with only a 35% literacy rate, spreading new technology has been difficult. Radio broadcasting was thought to be the most promising dissemination media. Most important in this situation was the awareness of the problem, and the willingness to seek solutions.

Gnibouwa Diassana

One single person, Gnibouwa Diassana, long committed to solar cooking, managed in these circumstances to make and sell solar box cookers. He did this on his own, without assistance even from the NGO he has worked with on other types of projects. This sole person, working only with his son, had a promotion plan for an energy week and even a business plan that would permit expanded production of solar box cookers. He hoped to find partners among women's organizations, but he knew tabout resistance to change, and rigid gender based roles, making it difficult for women to pursue the purchase of cookers. He was however a determined man, until he passed away in 2017. Pictures and story, Solar Cooker Review, March 2003).

Lanseri Niare

A project created by an individual was the work of Lanseri Niare, who introduced box cookers, both by teaching people how to build their own cooker and how to use the box when built. Major problems encountered in this project were glass breakage, termites if the box was used on the ground, and the Harmattan period (a severe windy season), which brought so much dust, that even when sunny, cooking was difficult) (Solar Cooker Review, Dec. 98).

KoZon Foundation

One other project, which has proven successful in Mali, operated under the auspices of the KoZon Foundation, a Dutch organization that has been involved in the western African Sahelian nations. From a beginning in Burkina Faso (see above), the efforts of KoZon and its dedicated volunteer Wietske Jongbloed, have introduced CooKits in Mali since 2001. Wietzke has operated at a very grassroots level, taking cookers (mostly using CooKits made in the Sahel to keep cost low) to marketplaces for demonstrations. The CooKits themselves were initially imported from abroad, and then purchased from Burkina Faso. This operation, relatively new, has not yet been evaluated by KoZon, but gradually movied forward, in cooperation with the Association des Femmes Ingénieurs du Mali. {{ArchivedPagesForHistory}

Climate and culture

A 2010 report from Mali’s agriculture ministry said that more than 500,000 hectares of forest are cleared for firewood and charcoal each year in the West African country. But new ways of cooking, using solar power and heat-retention cookers, could cut those losses.[1]

Based on knowledge gained from visiting solar cooking promoters and appropriate technology organizations, J.P. Martin-Vallas has developed some recommendations for solar cooker dissemination in Mali:

  • Target cities where firewood is quite expensive, such as in Kayes, Niafunke, and Tombouctou
  • Encourage dissemination by women
  • Focus on durable box-type solar cookers that accommodate large cooking pots
  • Engage local carpenters to make the cookers
  • Provide a five-year guarantee for each cooker sold

J.P. Martin-Vallas concluded that imported parabolic-type solar cookers are currently too expensive for most Malians. One way to lower prices, he says, would be to import bulk aluminum sheets and cut panels on site.

The following chart shows some sample annual firewood expenditures for households of 10 people. (Note: In 2005, 500 CFAs was approximately USD $1.)

City

Annual Firewood Expenditure
(in CFA Francs)

Kayes

300,000

Niafunke

300,000

Tombouctou

280,000

Douentza

180,000

Segou

150,000

Waki/Niafunke

150,000

Bourem

120,000

Koutiala

100,000

Koulikoro

75,000

Mopti

75,000

Kerouane

60,000

Northern part of the country: Desert (Sahel). Southern part of the country: Sunny, little firewood, and populated. (Source: Juan Urrutia Sanz, 2010-Feb-25)

See also

Resources

Possible funding

Project evaluations

Reports

Discussion groups

Articles in the media

External links

Contacts

The entities listed below are either based in Mali, or have established solar cooking projects there:

SCI Associates

NGOs

Manufacturers and vendors

Individuals

Government agencies

Educational institutions

See also

References