كتب الكاتب الفاتح جبرا المتوفرة بمعرض الدوحة
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the women trading Sudan's first carbon credits
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Cleaner stoves have saved Sudan over 36,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions and earned the country its first carbon credits
While attention in the sector has recently been focused on the IPCC's latest report on climate change, in Sudan women have been quietly making breakthroughs by issuing the country's first carbon credits. In a country blighted by conflict and drought, the Women's Development Association Network (WDAN) representing over 50,000 women in Sudan, is driving economic growth and reversing deforestation.
The town of El Fasher, the capital of the North Darfur region, is an area considered high risk by international markets because of its history of civil war, conflict and reliance on humanitarian aid. It is here that the Darfur Low Smoke Project, financed entirely by private sector money, was launched in 2007 by the WDAN, the international NGO Practical Action and the UK-based company Carbon Clear.
North Darfur is typical of areas in the region in that most of the poorest groups of women depend upon wood and charcoal for cooking. The result has been widespread deforestation and increasing desertification, made worse by extreme climate variability. To help reverse this process, women are being sold modern, energy-efficient, clean-burning liquid petroleum gas (LPG) cookstoves.
Setting up the project has been challenging. A year after it started several audit firms were contacted to check documentation and verify activity on the ground, an essential prerequisite for issuing carbon credits. All of the companies contacted refused to visit North Darfur, stating it was too unstable. Eventually an auditor was found but the site visits only took place in 2010, losing two year's credits. This financial uncertainty meant the project was nearly wound up in 2009.
Despite these initial setbacks, the project is now making headway. Out of a target of 10,000 cookstoves, 6,000 have been delivered, saving over 36,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions. Over half of the stoves have been registered by the Gold Standard Foundation in Switzerland, meaning that their emissions savings are eligible to be sold as premium carbon credits.
One of the women who has been using the stoves is Randa Faudul Ali, who lives in the village of Kafut. "Cooking with wood meant that the whole house was full of smoke. It's a house made of hay and inside it is completely black. I have serious eye problems as a result of the smoke – I was going blind because of the smoke. I think the LPG stove has saved my sight."
Ali adds: "I belong to the Women's Development Association in my village and other women come to my house to see the LPG stove and have learned about this new, safe way of cooking. I am helping to distribute 19 stoves to families across my village and 61 to other communities nearby."
In Sudan, charcoal costs a household around £20 a month, while LPG costs roughly £7 a month. But, the initial cost of the stove and gas canister place them beyond the reach of most families. To overcome this obstacle, Carbon Clear introduced a micro-loan scheme, which is operated by the WDAN. After six years, repayment rates are above 90% – very high for an area where nearly half of the people live below the poverty line.
As a result, local women's groups have been trained in how to manage money – enabling them to issue loans and collect repayments. They have also set themselves up as the main dealers for the Nile Petroleum Company in North Darfur and have established a series of community forests. To date over 43 community forests have been planted, each between 10-40 acres in size, to help replace North Darfur's scant tree cover.
Over the next decade it is hoped that the project's stoves will save over 300,000 tonnes of carbon and hundreds more community forests will be planted. The first credits from the Darfur project were recently sold to an insurance firm based in the UK.
"The Darfur Low Smoke Stoves Project demonstrates how businesses can successfully reduce emissions and make a positive contribution to communities," says the CEO of Carbon Clear, Mark Chadwick.
The project has brought carbon finance to some of the poorest communities in the world and at the same time shown the potential of women to lead the way in tackling climate change.
"It is essential that carbon finance reaches poorer countries, regions and communities – and it must both deliver climate and development outcomes," says Adrian Rimmer, CEO of Gold Standard. "Our goal is to drive finance into thousands more projects that will help to mitigate climate change and bring development benefits to millions of people in Sudan and around the world."
Mary Gallagher is policy officer at Practical Action.
http://www.theguardian.com/global-development-professionals-...sudan-carbon-credits
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Re: the women trading Sudan's first carbon credits (Re: mwahib idriss)
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Ten thousand new stoves will radically improve the health of women and children in Darfur, who are dying from breathing in smoke generated by indoor wood fires.
Families will be able to buy the stoves, powered by liquified petroleum gas (LPG) canisters, through a micro-credit scheme managed by local women.
UK-based Carbon Clear, working with an NGO called Practical Action, has developed the project with carbon finance. Low-smoke stoves prevent indoor air pollution, which kills more people every year than malaria.
The stoves also cut greenhouse gas emissions and prevent deforestation and desertification. The charity points out that 90% of homes in Sudan use wood to cook on.
The project originates from a pilot in another part of Sudan funded by the Department for International Development. Carbon Clear found private investment, developing a carbon credit project that is funded through carbon finance.
The project is innovative on many levels. It is the first carbon credit programme registered in Sudan and was developed at a time of political instability in Darfur.
It is also the first project to be financed through private capital in Darfur that is self-funding and allows for expansion. The project is run by a local women's group, equipping them with expertise to deliver micro-finance, sales and training.
It meets the strict requirements of The Gold Standard carbon credit certification process which requires projects to reduce carbon emissions and deliver measurable sustainable development and environmental benefits to local communities.
Demand for firewood for cooking leads to environmental degradation as trees are cut down and not replaced. The Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves states that cooking with LPG reduces most pollutants by over 95%.
The project, which eventually aims to supply 10,000 LPG stoves to the area, has already delivered around 6,000 in and around El Fashir, Darfur.
Jackie Wills is a member of the Wordworks network
http://www.theguardian.com/sustainable-business/sustainabili...ke-stoves?CMP=twt_gu
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