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Clean cooking champions using green and renewable energy sources such as solar power, biogas, and ethanol, drastically reducing the environmental impact. Without the heavy reliance on biomass, the threats of forest degradation, biodiversity loss, and climbing carbon emissions are also greatly diminished.
Our food systems are a significant source of global emissions, contributing roughly 25% to 30% worldwide. Depending on the food item, a notable portion of these emissions (6-61%) can be attributed to the cooking process alone.
Moreover, inefficient cooking methods often produce black carbon, a component of soot with a high global warming potential. Transitioning to clean cooking technologies minimizes this effect, mitigating climate warming.
For instance, solar cookers emit no greenhouse gases. At the same time, improved cookstoves and biogas systems reduce emissions by burning fuel more efficiently or using waste materials that would otherwise release methane during decomposition. This efficiency reduces the strain on natural resources—efficient cookstoves can halve the amount of wood or biomass needed, preserving forests and reducing the time and resources spent on fuel collection.
