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EL FASHER, Sudan and BERKELEY, Calif., Oct. 30 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The Berkeley, California-based Darfur Stoves Project (DSP), in partnership with Oxfam America and the Sudanese organization, Sustainable Action Group (SAG), has launched an assembly facility for fuel-efficient stoves in El Fasher, the capital of the Darfur region. The assembly facility is the last stop on a global technology solution supply chain that starts with testing and design in the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California and stops in a manufacturing facility outside of Mumbai, India before arriving, ultimately, for assembly in Darfur, Sudan.
After weeks of training in stove assembly for residents of Al Salam, one of Darfur's many crowded displacement camps, the small facility now produces dozens of stoves for displaced families every day, while providing a source of income for the assembly workers in the process.
Scott Sadlon, a Mechanical Engineer and recent Stanford graduate, just returned from a two-month trip to North Darfur where he oversaw the formation of the Berkeley-Darfur Stove® assembly facility. Working alongside DSP partners Oxfam America and SAG to establish the facility and train the assembly workers from the camps, he oversaw the creation of a safe, efficient workshop.
Returning from Darfur, Scott Sadlon commented, "This new partnership with Oxfam America will significantly increase production beyond the 5,000 stoves already assembled and distributed...this is a big step." With the new assembly facility, the total number of stoves assembled and distributed will increase to roughly 15,000 stoves, a 200% improvement.
400,000 displaced and refugee families are in need of cooking solutions to meet their basic survival needs in Darfur and neighboring Chad. According to Andree Sosler, DSP's Executive Director, "opening this workshop in Darfur brings us closer to our goal of equipping each displaced and refugee family with a fuel-efficient stove. This is just the start."
Each stove reduces wood consumption three to four times compared with the traditional three-stone stoves used in the region. As a result, Darfur's women leave the relative safety of the camps less frequently, thereby decreasing the risk of sexual violence.
The Berkeley-Darfur Stove® was developed by a team of scientists and engineers at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in Berkeley, CA under the supervision of Dr. Ashok Gadgil with the support of the Blum Center for Developing Economies at UC Berkeley.
For more information, please contact Andree Sosler at andree@darfurstoves.org or at (415) 533-4605.
The Darfur Stoves Project (DSP) is a nonprofit organization founded in 2005 with the goal of improving the safety and wellbeing of displaced and refugee families in Darfur by providing cookstoves that use three to four times less fuel than a traditional three-stone fire. DSP is working to make a meaningful contribution by reducing both the frequency with which women leave the relative safety of the camps and the money and food rations commonly traded for firewood. Visit Darfur Stoves Project's new website launching on Friday, October 30, 2009: www.darfurstoves.org.
Oxfam America is an international relief and development organization that creates lasting solutions to poverty, hunger, and injustice. Together with individuals and local groups in more than 100 countries, Oxfam saves lives, helps people overcome poverty, and fights for social justice. Oxfam America is an affiliate of Oxfam International.
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) is a U.S. Department of Energy national laboratory located in Berkeley, California. It conducts unclassified scientific research and is managed by the University of California.
The Blum Center for Developing Economies at UC Berkeley links world-class faculty, inspiring new curriculum, and the best new technologies, services and business models to create real-world solutions for developing economies. The center educates students, builds partnerships, and rigorously evaluates its innovations in order to make scalable and sustainable contributions toward the alleviation of poverty.
SOURCE Darfur Stoves Project
Published October 30, 2009 Reads 231
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