A simple stoves helps improve lives in Malawi

The project activity aims at distributing 41,472 improved cookstoves that are more efficient and use less wood for household cooking and heating than traditional stoves. The new stoves are three times as efficienct as the three stone and unimproved cook-stoves used prior to the project activity. This results from an improved combustion and heat transfer, raising the cooking pot to the hottest point above the flame, and improved heat retention. To make sure efficiency is maximised, the project promotes using less and dry firewood, a pot lid and soaking legumes before cooking. The stoves called "Chitetezo Mbaula" are manufactured locally from local materials, resulting in higher income generation and acquisition of new skills for local people.

Ancillary benefits include reduced smoke during cooking, which reduces exposure to health damaging pollutants and reduced time and effort procuring woodfuel. The stoves are attractive to end-users and can result in quicker cooking times. The entire Programme of Activities (PoA) has been growing for 10 years and so far reached over 2.5 million people.

How improved cookstoves contribute to climate action

According to a statistic from the World Health Organization (WHO, 2022) around a third of the global population still relies on un­safe and environmentally harmful cooking methods. This includes, for example, cooking over open fires or using polluting cooking fuels, such as coal or kerosene. Improved cookstoves tackle this problem by using thermal energy more efficiently. Depending on the model, an improved cookstove can reduce fuel consumption by up to 70 percent, which significantly saves CO2 emissions and can lower the pressure on local forests as less firewood needs to be harvested.

Improved cookstove projects allow the distribution of the - often simple - devices made from metal or clay to households, small enterprises or community facilities. Especially for households, this has an impact beyond the CO2 reduction: better indoor air quality decreases respiratory diseases and families can save time and money as less fuel is needed. Improved cookstoves projects in the ClimatePartner portfolio are registered with international standards.

Contribution to the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
No PovertyThe use of efficient cookstoves contributes to Malawi's poverty eradication, as it reduces dependence on expensive firewood, for example.
Zero HungerThanks to more efficient cookstoves, people save on fuel costs. This leaves more for their nutrition.
Good Health and Well-BeingThe more sustainable cooking technology reduces the release of harmful pollutants that are produced during cooking.
Gender EqualityThe project creates shorter and less polluting cooking times, which women and children in particular are exposed to.
Affordable and Clean EnergyThe more efficient cookstoves enable a more cost-effective and sustainable use of energy for cooking.
Decent Work and Economic GrowthThe stoves are manufactured locally, using local materials where possible, which leads to local income generation.
Climate ActionThe project consists of several sub-projects, all of which contribute to the distribution of improved cookstoves in Malawi and thereby demonstrably reduce CO2 emissions.
Life on LandBy reducing the burning of biomass (e.g. wood) in cooking, ecosystems are better able to recover from human intervention.
Partnerships for the GoalsThe project supports partnerships to promote clean cooking technologies.
Project standardGold Standard VER (GS VER)TechnologyImproved cookstovesRegionCountrywide, MalawiVerified byEarthood Services Private Limited