November 2006

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Focus Energy 2006 Prize and Improved Charcoal Production Technology developed in Africa/India- "goes Europe"!
Chris Adam, Nairobi, Kenya, November 21, 2006

Focus Energy 2006Focus Energy 2006

Dung Berry Fireballs
Lanny Henson, October 30, 2006

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GERES: New Lao Stove Production, Monitoring and Use in Cambodia
Jean-François Rozis, GERES, November 16, 2006

GERES reports production of the New Lao Stove(improved charcoal stove for urban areas) for commercialization with no subsidy between October 2005 and September 2006 at 87 999 units for an average of average 7,333 units per month.
100 000 units are planned for the year 2007.

GERES uses the following plan for monitoring stove production and use.

Stove Monitoring Table
Stove Monitoring Table
GERES/CFSP Cambodia New Lao Bucket Stove
GERES/CFSP Cambodia New Lao Bucket Stove

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Production of Sixbricks Rocket Stoves in Uganda and Darfur 2006
Ken Goyer, AidAfrica, International Lifeline Fund, November 12, 2006

Dear Tom,

I believe that so far, with Mathew and All Nations Christian Care, we have made about 15,000 SixBricks Rocket Stoves in the Lira, (north) Uganda refugee camps . I have 2,700 numbered pictures of these stoves, with the owner, her house, the flag of the Rotary Club of East Fresno and the number of the stove. Taking pictures has proven to be more difficult and more elusive than actually making the stoves. I hope to show these pictures at our ETHOS conference this year. Dan Wolf of the International Lifeline Fund has taken over this project in Lira and plans to fund 100,000 more stoves as well as to fund and run the project in Darfur camps to build a targeted 100,000 stoves there.

Meanwhile, I have started a new stove project in Gulu, (north) Uganda to make an unlimited number of Six Bricks Rocket Stoves in the Gulu refugee camps, in addition to teach stove building in Northern Uganda. AidAfrica is also working with Rotary Clubs in Southern Uganda to make about 1000 stoves for each of thirty Adopt a Village projects.

So this coming year will be even more exciting than last year.
AidAfrica now has an office and staff in Gulu and we plan to send volunteers from here to Gulu (and other parts of Uganda) to build stoves, start a reforestation project, address the problem of malaria and continue with the medical project which has directly saved very many lives.

Much thanks to you for running the stoves list. It has been instrumental to bringing the world closer together.

Best regards, Ken Goyer

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