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Smoke Removal in Kenya

Boiling Point
Front cover of Boiling Point issue 34
Issue 34 (1994) Smoke Removal

ArticleSmoke Removal in Kenya
AuthorDominic Walubengo


In rural Kenya' separate are used for cooking and space heating whilst in urban areas, houses include a kitchen although chimneys are not often built. In the 1980s, large numbers of improved stoves were introduced - mainly the one-pot, portable Kenya Ceramic Jiko (KCJ) - but they were all without chimneys. It is mostly in institutional kitchens that one finds stoves with chimneys, and where they lead to great benefits. So why are there not more domestic stoves with chimneys? Despite the obvious advantages of smoke removal, there are several reasons why stove makers do not include chimneys in the design of their improved stoves. Many urban Kenyans live in rented houses, and cannot install a chimney in a house that does not belong to them. Stove portability is often of paramount importance and a chimney would make this difficult, if not impossible. If a chimney is poorly installed it can prevent good combustion and even cause back--firing, with the smoke ending up in the kitchen. The chimney may fall off leaving a hole in the roof. It can rust or be damaged by wind and rain and need replacing. This means climbing onto a roof which is not strong and may collapse. A tool is needed to clean a chimney and if this is not done regularly soot accumulates, blocks the chimney, causes incomplete combustion and can even cause fires in the chimney or roof.

For rural houses, chimneys are out of the question. Most people live in mud huts with thatched roofs which are not particularly appropriate for chimneys, catch fire easily, and are difficult to make watertight around the chimney. Realistically, someone trying to promote chimney stoves in the rural areas would have also to present an entirely new house design Hoods also require chimneys, and so their installation faces similar problems. The future for chimneys in Kenya is for institutional cooking, not domestic houses. The smoke problem should be approached through better house designs.

[top] [end]Contents: Boiling Point 34: Smoke Removal

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Smoke in the Kitchen - Any Stove Will Smoke if You Dont Use it Correctly - Acute Respiratory Infection, Conjunctivitis and Accidental Burns - Exposure to Air Pollution From Transitional Household Fuels In A South African Population - Smoke Removal in Kenya - Chinese Chimneys - Indoor Air Pollution in Rural Tigray - Removing Smoke from Nepali Kitchens - A Breath of Fresh Air for Smoky Houses - Vietnames Kitchens - Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Improving Environmental Degradation - Indian Governments Stove Programme in Question - Cooking energy Efficiency in Indonesia - Phillipines Ricehull Stove - Stoves for Cafes and Food Stalls

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Page created: 21 August 2007; Last edited: 21 August 2007; Version: 0
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Pagename: SmokeRemovalInKenya @HEDON: DUGA