Solar Cooking
This article is about an entity that either no longer exists or that may no longer be active in solar cooking promotion. It is retained here for archival purposes.

Last edited: 21 May 2015      

Sol de Vida, (also Fundación Sol de Vida), a solar cooking promotion group in Costa Rica, has been awarded the 1999 National Prize in Energy—Innovative Project. This recognition is granted annually by the Executive Power, the Ministry of Environment and Energy, the National Power and Light Company, the Chamber of Industries of Costa Rica and the Association for the Investigation and Development of Energy and the Environment. Sol de Vida is best known for its programs of construction and use of solar cookers, its ExpoSol educational facility on solar and environmental matters, and its annual Fiesta del Sol event. In 2001 Sol de Vida won the Ford Motor Company Environmental Award for its Solar Stove project and three additional SGP projects in the Gulf of Nicoya.

Operating in the Santa Cruz and Nicoya counties of the Guanacaste region, Sol de Vida takes a holistic approach to expanding the use of renewable energy. The project not only promotes the use of solar power for cooking, but also seeks to build women’s capacity for other development activities through the process of constructing and using solar cookers. The project originated in 1989 when an American physics professor, William Lankford, visited Costa Rica and a number of women attended a workshop he gave on building solar cookers. After this, the women themselves established the Sol de Vida in 1994. See Central American Solar Energy Project for more information about Professor Lankford.

Articles in the media[]

See also[]

Also see Central American Solar Energy Project contact info.