GreeniacsArticles
Energy
Solar Cooking Getting Started
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Written by Miranda Huey
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| Wednesday, 22 October 2008 | ||||
Solar Cooking: Getting Started• Box cookers,If you decide you want your own solar cooker, consider the advantages and disadvantages of each type. Box cookers are literally shaped like a box. While these can cook large quantities of food evenly without the need to monitor them, they take a long time to cook. Panel cookers are made up of flat panels which focus the rays into the food. The advantage of panel cookers is that they are extremely cheap and easy to build. Parabolic cookers are shaped like parabola dishes, or a bowl which focuses the light so precisely that it cooks about as fast as on a conventional stove. The disadvantage is that users have to continuously adjust the dish to follow the sun.1 In the United States, solar ovens are popular for a variety of different purposes. Cooking food typically entails using electricity, natural gas, propane, or wood, all of which cost money to use and have carbon emissions that contribute to global warming. Solar cooking, on the other hand, has zero carbon emissions and zero cost to use, since all the energy comes directly from the sun.2 Many people like to use them in their backyards in order to slow-cook a meal, keeping all the flavor and nutrients. Some people even buy solar cookers in case of natural disaster, so that they can cook without electrical power. Hikers and campers can use these to cook where there is no nearby electric source.3 Worldwide, there are some impressive large-scale solar cooking projects. A temple in Tirupathi, India that cooks 30,000 meals a day hosts a community kitchen that uses solar cooking technology.4 In Mount Abu, India, there is an even bigger solar kitchen which has the capacity to cook up to 38,500 meals a day. Both use parabolic dish concentrators, which all reflect sunlight to receivers, generating enough heat to make steam that gets carried back down to the kitchen inside to be used for cooking.5 As impressive as grand solar projects are, solar cooking can actually save lives. Half the people in the world currently use wood or dung to cook their food, which creates huge problems for both people and the environment. Deforestation exacerbates global warming, landslides, and desertification. Smoke created from traditional oven cooking causes respiratory infections that have been attributed to 5 million young children dying every year. Solar cooking, on the other hand, causes much less deforestation and smoke. Solar ovens might also alleviate diseases spread through contaminated water which cause 80% of the world's illnesses. Solar box cookers can easily pasteurize water, providing safe, clean water. A major benefit of solar cooking is that it could free people, usually women, from the hours they spend searching for firewood.6 Interested in trying out solar cooking for yourself? You can either make one yourself out of cardboard and tin foil, or you can buy some online. They range from the cheap, such as the CooKit at $25: http://65.108.108.197/catalog/cookit-p-44.html?osCsid=ee7f2ed77bdb76a1cce73bc1342e8a59, to the very expensive, the El Sol Parabolic Solar Barbeque at $650, which can cook for up to 12 people: http://solarcooking.ca/product_info.php?cPath=2&products_id=32. A really cool solar cooker that's not yet on the market is the BCK solar cooker, looks like a parabolic solar cooker but then the cloth sides fold in to look like a thermos: http://designawards.wordpress.com/2007/09/05/bck-solar-cooker/. Solar cooking is a “hot” innovation in countries all around the world. While solar ovens just sound cool, if they could become more mainstream, they could really help the environment and save millions of lives. Who knew something so delicious could be so good for the world? 1http://solarcooking.org/solarcooking-faq.htm. 2http://www.treehugger.com/files/2006/10/the_sun_cook_so_1.php. 3http://www.bcsea.org/sustainableenergy/solarcooking.asp. 4http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1820844,00.html. 5http://www.inhabitat.com/2008/03/17/world%E2%80%99s-largest-solar-kitchen-in-india-can-cook-upto-38500-meals-per- day/. 6 http://journeytoforever.org/sc.html.
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| Last Updated ( Wednesday, 26 October 2011 ) | ||||
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Green Facts
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Nudge your thermostat up two degrees in the summer and down two degrees in the winter to prevent 2,000 pounds of carbon dioxide from entering the atmosphere.
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It takes 6,000,000 trees to make 1 year's worth of tissues for the world.
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One recycled aluminum can will save enough energy to run a 100-watt bulb for 20 hours, a computer for 3 hours, or a TV for 2 hours.
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Refrigerators built in 1975 used 4 times more energy than current models.
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82 percent of greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S. come from burning fossil fuels.
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You will save 300 pounds of carbon dioxide for every 10,000 miles you drive if you always keep your car’s tires fully inflated.
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Washing your clothes in cold or warm instead of hot water saves 500 pounds of carbon dioxide a year, and drying your clothes on a clothesline six months out of the year would save another 700 pounds.
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A steel mill using recycled scrap reduces related water pollution, air pollution, and mining wastes by about 70%.
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Every week about 20 species of plants and animals become extinct.
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In the United States, automobiles produce over 20 percent of total carbon emissions. Walk or bike and you'll save one pound of carbon for every mile you travel.
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You will save 100 pounds of carbon for each incandescent bulb that you replace with a compact fluorescent bulb (CFL), over the life of the bulb.
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The World Health Organization estimates that 2 million people die prematurely worldwide every year due to air pollution.
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Turning off the tap when brushing your teeth can save as much as 10 gallons a day per person.
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A tree that provides a home with shade from the sun can reduce the energy required to run the air conditioner and save an additional 200 to 2,000 pounds of carbon over its lifetime.
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Americans throw away more than 120 million cell phones each year, which contribute 60,000 tons of waste to landfills annually.
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A single quart of motor oil, if disposed of improperly, can contaminate up to 2,000,000 gallons of fresh water.
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States with bottle deposit laws have 35-40% less litter by volume.
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For every 38,000 bills consumers pay online instead of by mail, 5,058 pounds of greenhouse gases are avoided and two tons of trees are preserved.
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American workers spend an average of 47 hours per year commuting through rush hour traffic. This adds up to 23 billion gallons of gas wasted in traffic each year.
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A laptop consumes five times less electricity than a desktop computer.
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77% of people who commute to work by car drive alone.
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Recycling aluminum saves 95% of the energy used to make the material from scratch.
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Plastic bags and other plastic garbage thrown into the ocean kill as many as 1,000,000 sea creatures every year.
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Americans use 100 million tin and steel cans every day.
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Americans throw away enough aluminum to rebuild our entire commercial fleet of airplanes every 3 months
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Recycling 1 million laptop computers can save the amount of energy used by 3,657 homes in the U.S. over the course of a year.
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Glass can be recycled over and over again without ever wearing down.
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Bamboo absorbs 35% more carbon dioxide than equivalent stands of trees.
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Shaving 10 miles off of your weekly driving pattern can eliminate about 500 pounds of carbon dioxide emissions a year.
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In California homes, about 10% of energy usage is related to TVs, DVRs, cable and satellite boxes, and DVD players.
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Rainforests are being cut down at the rate of 100 acres per minute.
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Less than 1% of electricity in the United States is generated from solar power.
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Recycling for one year at Stanford University saved the equivalent of 33,913 trees and the need for 636 tons of iron ore, coal, and limestone.
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If every U.S. household turned the thermostat down by 10 degrees for seven hours each night during the cold months, and seven hours each weekday, it would prevent nearly gas emissions.
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Recycling 100 million cell phones can save enough energy to power 18,500 homes in the U.S. for a year.
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An aluminum can that is thrown away instead of recycled will still be a can 500 years from now!
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You’ll save two pounds of carbon for every 20 glass bottles that you recycle.
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Due to tiger poaching, habitat destruction, and other human-tiger conflicts, tigers now number around 3,200—a decrease in population by about 70% from 100 years ago.
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Current sea ice levels are at least 47% lower than they were in 1979.


