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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
9.25.2007 - 06:00am ET
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New Global Entity Ramps Up Battle Against 'Silent Killer In The Kitchen'
Aims to Achieve a Five-year, $25 Million Investment to Reduce Global Indoor Air Pollution Deaths
According to the WHO, IAP claims the lives of 1.5 million people a year worldwide, or one person every 20 seconds.
(CSRwire) SEPTEMBER 25, 2007 - Independent UK charity Shell Foundation and leading US
environmental nonprofit Envirofit International today announced a
ground-breaking partnership that has the potential to significantly reduce
the number of global deaths caused by Indoor Air Pollution (IAP) - the
smoke generated by traditional fires and stoves used in developing world
homes. More than three billion people, or almost half the world's
population, cook in their homes using traditional fire and stoves, burning
biomass fuels like wood, dung and crop waste. Day in and out families
breathe in lethal fumes from these cooking fires. According to the World
Health Organization, IAP claims the lives of 1.5 million people a year
worldwide, or one person every 20 seconds. Women and children make up the
vast majority of these deaths due to their increased exposure in the home.
Envirofit will be tasked with handling the scale-up and spin off of
the Shell Foundation's Breathing Space program, [1] which was founded in
2002 to achieve significant global reductions in IAP. This new partnership
is part of the Foundation's mission to see 10 million clean-burning stoves
sold in five countries over the next five years. The Foundation is
providing Envirofit with investment and organizational support to form an
independent global entity. In turn, Envirofit International, working with
their technology partner Colorado State University's Engines and Energy
Conversion Laboratory, will design, develop, market and distribute clean
cookstoves that are engineered to emit significantly less toxic emissions
and use less fuel.
Envirofit was chosen following a long and detailed two-year process. The
search focused on finding an organization that shared similar business
values to the Shell Foundation and had the technology skills and proven
commercial expertise to bring high-quality consumer products to the
developing world.
Envirofit's commercial model represents a new, more sustainable approach
to tackling IAP, relying on market mechanisms to guide product development
and drive consumer demand, instead of donating or subsidizing the sales of
stoves. This process of treating people as customers means true market
forces will drive sales. Envirofit is thus tasked with creating a
high-quality, aspirational product that provides real value.
"Solutions to IAP have not been forthcoming because the needs of the very
people affected by it have not been fully considered," said Harish Hande,
Managing Director of Selco India, a leading Indian social venture
enterprise. "Solutions to IAP reside in creating need-based technologies
and financing, which are in turn based on market principles. The
partnership between Shell Foundation and Envirofit is a breath of fresh
air, one that will provide the impetus for market and end-user centric
solutions."
The Shell Foundation sees this partnership as one of the most exciting and
important developments in its seven year history. Shell Foundation Director
Kurt Hoffman said: "What makes us stand out from other development
charities is our technique of applying market principles and business
thinking to figure out how to tackle global developmental challenges..
With half the world's population still cooking on wood, dung and other
biomass-burning stoves, the only way we are going to make a significant
long-term impact and achieve the scale needed is to get private sector
thinking involved.
"I am delighted we have signed up Envirofit to do just that. The staff has
extensive commercial experience and they have an impressive record
implementing global commercial projects."
Envirofit's particular expertise combines world-class engineering, a
mature product development cycle, creative global marketing and robust,
on-the-ground operations. The team works to fully understand and address
barriers to adoption of products in the developing world. Through this
strategy, Envirofit hopes to bring energy-efficient, pollution-reducing
technologies to millions of people worldwide, where the health risks and
economic burden associated with pollution are most severe.
Envirofit Chairman Ron Bills said: "Envirofit has the business and
engineering know-how to make a significant positive impact on the global
health crisis of indoor air pollution. Working with our world-renowned
technology partner, Colorado State University's Engines and Energy
Conversion Laboratory, we will deliver on this promise through a
disciplined, rigorous product development process that is sustainable and
fully addresses the cultural, economic, and environmental realities of our
end users. We are excited to work closely with local communities, public
and private sectors to create a stable, global infrastructure for getting
clean stoves to those who need them most."
Envirofit International is a US-based nonprofit corporation launched in
Colorado in October 2003 through funding from the Bohemian Foundation.
Envirofit's work developing and disseminating technologies that reduce
pollution and enhance energy efficiency in developing countries has helped
the company become recognized as a worldwide leader in the challenge to
produce energy efficiency alternatives. Earlier this year it won a
prestigious World Clean Energy Award for its leadership in implementing
broad-based energy solutions to global challenges.
Shell Foundation initially got involved with the Indoor Air Pollution
issue in 2002, running nine pilots in seven countries in partnership with
existing IAP actors. Commenting on the very significant role played by its
partners in the past five years, Mr. Hoffman said,
"Without the valuable lessons learned from these pilots and the many
organizations who worked with the Breathing Space team, we would not be in
a position to spin-off the program. This is particularly the case in our
lead country of India. We are extremely grateful for the input from all
partners and we look forward to continuing to work with them in the
future."
In a separate deal, Shell Foundation has partnered with scientists at
Berkeley Air Monitoring Group [2] to carry out detailed evaluation of the
stoves put into the field by Envirofit to ensure they are externally
validated.
About Shell Foundation
Shell Foundation was established by Shell Group in 2000 as an independent,
UK registered charity (no.1080999) operating with a global mandate. It
focuses on enterprise-based solutions to poverty and environmental
challenges linked to the impact of energy and globalization. It acts like
an investor, identifying financially sustainable solutions to these
challenges that can be taken to scale and replicated to achieve global
impact. By 2010 the Foundation will have used $75 milllion to leverage
$350 million from other organizations.
About Envirofit
Envirofit International, Ltd. is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation that
develops engineered solutions to improve the human condition on a global
scale, with a primary emphasis on applications in the developing world.
The corporation was formed in 2003 as an independent spin-off of Colorado
State University's Engines and Energy Conversion Laboratory in the College
of Engineering and the Entrepreneurship Program in CSU's College of
Business. Envirofit utilizes the same rigorous product-development
methodology and protocols used in modern industry to develop and
commercialize energy-efficient, pollution-reducing technologies that have
the greatest potential positive impact on global environmental, economic,
and public health issues. For more information, visit Envirofit
International's new website at www.envirofit.org.
About the Engines and Energy Conversion Laboratory at Colorado State
University
The Engines and Energy Conversion Laboratory (EECL) is a unique
research/education program at Colorado State University with emphasis on
engines, fuels, and energy conversion technology. With a focus towards
market driven solutions, products developed at the EECL, in partnership
with industrial sponsors and multiple spin-off organizations, have reduced
pollution in the atmosphere by millions of tons and have saved over 14
billion cubic feet of natural gas. Beginning in 2002, the EECL began a
program of international technology development primarily aimed at
increasing energy efficiency and reducing the environmental impact of
transportation, electric power production, and cooking/household energy in
developing countries.
NOTES TO EDITORS:
1. Breathing Space is a registered trademark of Shell Foundation. For
further information about Shell Foundation’s Breathing Space programme
go to:
www.shellfoundation.org/index.php?menuID=3&smenuID=10&bmenuID=5
2. Founded in 2007, Berkeley Air Monitoring Group carries out rigorous
scientific evaluation of initiatives designed to improve health and
well-being through improved household stoves, fuels and education. The
firm has close ties to the University of California, Berkeley, and builds
directly on the household energy monitoring and evaluation methods
developed by the Kirk Smith Research Group.
IAP Key Facts:
IAP is responsible for 2.7% of the global burden of disease, making
it one of the top ten global health risks
This rises to 3.7% in high-mortality developing countries, making it
the most lethal killer after malnutrition, unsafe sex and lack of safe
water and sanitation
Children under five years of age make up 56% of all IAP-attributable
deaths
Exposure to IAP more than doubles the risk of pneumonia and is thus
responsible for more than 900,000 of the 2 million annual deaths globally
from pneumonia. It is also responsible for 700,000 out of the 2.7 million
global deaths due to Chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases, such as
chronic bronchitis.
All the facts come from the World Health Organization website (www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs292/en/index.html)
and its 2006 report Fuel for Life: Household Energy and Health: (www.who.int/indoorair/publications/fuelforlife/en/index.html)
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