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What would you do if cooking endangered your life?

solid fuels, sad truths ASIAN TRENDS MONITORING THE DISEASE BURDEN Men exposed to indoor air pollution from solid fuels, such as wood, dung and charcoal, are 1.8 times more likely to contract chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Women are 3.2 times more likely. Children below 5 are 2.3 times more likely to contract acute respiratory infections. - WHO, 2006 Philippines Population still using solid fuels for cooking, 2008 (%) Persistent problems for the poor Indonesia POVERTY Vietnam Cambodia SOLID FUEL COOKING Laos GATHERING FIREWOOD Myanmar 20 40 AIR POLLUTION & ILLNESS 60 Source: UN MDG Indicators Database 80 100 Over 250 million people in ASEAN are still reliant on solid fuels for cooking their meals and heating their homes. SCHOOL ABSENTEES Papers & İEA 2010 World Bank 2003 Schei et a reports on Ezzati & Kammen 2002 ITDG 1998 Lin et solid fuel Pokhrel et al. 2005 WHO 2006 Edwards et al. 2007WHO 2O Smith & Mehta 2003. Bruce et al. 2004 Diaz et al 2 Rehfuess, Mehta, Pruss-Ustun 2006 UNDP 2005 Duflo, Greenstone, Hanna 2008 UNDP 2007 The problem has been discussed ad nauseam. The solution has yet to be found. Taufik Indrakesuma (@SEAsiaEnergy on Twitter) © 2011 asiantrendsmonitoring.com solid fuels, sad truths ASIAN TRENDS MONITORING THE DISEASE BURDEN Men exposed to indoor air pollution from solid fuels, such as wood, dung and charcoal, are 1.8 times more likely to contract chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Women are 3.2 times more likely. Children below 5 are 2.3 times more likely to contract acute respiratory infections. - WHO, 2006 Philippines Population still using solid fuels for cooking, 2008 (%) Persistent problems for the poor Indonesia POVERTY Vietnam Cambodia SOLID FUEL СОOKING Laos GATHERING FIREWOOD Myanmar 20 40 AIR POLLUTION & ILLNESS 60 Source: UN MDG Indicators Database 80 100 Over 250 million people in ASEAN are still reliant on solid fuels for cooking their meals and heating their homes. SCHOOL ABSENTEES Раpers & İEA 2010 World Bank 2003 Schei et a reports on Ezzati & Kammen 2002 ITDG 1998 Lin et solid fuel Pokhrel et al. 2005 WHO 2006 Edwards et al. 2007WHO 2O Smith & Mehta 2003. Bruce et al. 2004 Diaz et al 2 Rehfuess, Mehta, Pruss-Ustun 2006 UNDP 2005 Duflo, Greenstone, Hanna 2008 UNDP 2007 The problem has been discussed ad nauseam. The solution has yet to be found. Taufik Indrakesuma (@SEAsiaEnergy on Twitter) © 2011 asiantrendsmonitoring.com solid fuels, sad truths ASIAN TRENDS MONITORING THE DISEASE BURDEN Men exposed to indoor air pollution from solid fuels, such as wood, dung and charcoal, are 1.8 times more likely to contract chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Women are 3.2 times more likely. Children below 5 are 2.3 times more likely to contract acute respiratory infections. - WHO, 2006 Philippines Population still using solid fuels for cooking, 2008 (%) Persistent problems for the poor Indonesia POVERTY Vietnam Cambodia SOLID FUEL СОOKING Laos GATHERING FIREWOOD Myanmar 20 40 AIR POLLUTION & ILLNESS 60 Source: UN MDG Indicators Database 80 100 Over 250 million people in ASEAN are still reliant on solid fuels for cooking their meals and heating their homes. SCHOOL ABSENTEES Раpers & İEA 2010 World Bank 2003 Schei et a reports on Ezzati & Kammen 2002 ITDG 1998 Lin et solid fuel Pokhrel et al. 2005 WHO 2006 Edwards et al. 2007WHO 2O Smith & Mehta 2003. Bruce et al. 2004 Diaz et al 2 Rehfuess, Mehta, Pruss-Ustun 2006 UNDP 2005 Duflo, Greenstone, Hanna 2008 UNDP 2007 The problem has been discussed ad nauseam. The solution has yet to be found. Taufik Indrakesuma (@SEAsiaEnergy on Twitter) © 2011 asiantrendsmonitoring.com solid fuels, sad truths ASIAN TRENDS MONITORING THE DISEASE BURDEN Men exposed to indoor air pollution from solid fuels, such as wood, dung and charcoal, are 1.8 times more likely to contract chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Women are 3.2 times more likely. Children below 5 are 2.3 times more likely to contract acute respiratory infections. - WHO, 2006 Philippines Population still using solid fuels for cooking, 2008 (%) Persistent problems for the poor Indonesia POVERTY Vietnam Cambodia SOLID FUEL СОOKING Laos GATHERING FIREWOOD Myanmar 20 40 AIR POLLUTION & ILLNESS 60 Source: UN MDG Indicators Database 80 100 Over 250 million people in ASEAN are still reliant on solid fuels for cooking their meals and heating their homes. SCHOOL ABSENTEES Раpers & İEA 2010 World Bank 2003 Schei et a reports on Ezzati & Kammen 2002 ITDG 1998 Lin et solid fuel Pokhrel et al. 2005 WHO 2006 Edwards et al. 2007WHO 2O Smith & Mehta 2003. Bruce et al. 2004 Diaz et al 2 Rehfuess, Mehta, Pruss-Ustun 2006 UNDP 2005 Duflo, Greenstone, Hanna 2008 UNDP 2007 The problem has been discussed ad nauseam. The solution has yet to be found. Taufik Indrakesuma (@SEAsiaEnergy on Twitter) © 2011 asiantrendsmonitoring.com solid fuels, sad truths ASIAN TRENDS MONITORING THE DISEASE BURDEN Men exposed to indoor air pollution from solid fuels, such as wood, dung and charcoal, are 1.8 times more likely to contract chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Women are 3.2 times more likely. Children below 5 are 2.3 times more likely to contract acute respiratory infections. - WHO, 2006 Philippines Population still using solid fuels for cooking, 2008 (%) Persistent problems for the poor Indonesia POVERTY Vietnam Cambodia SOLID FUEL СОOKING Laos GATHERING FIREWOOD Myanmar 20 40 AIR POLLUTION & ILLNESS 60 Source: UN MDG Indicators Database 80 100 Over 250 million people in ASEAN are still reliant on solid fuels for cooking their meals and heating their homes. SCHOOL ABSENTEES Раpers & İEA 2010 World Bank 2003 Schei et a reports on Ezzati & Kammen 2002 ITDG 1998 Lin et solid fuel Pokhrel et al. 2005 WHO 2006 Edwards et al. 2007WHO 2O Smith & Mehta 2003. Bruce et al. 2004 Diaz et al 2 Rehfuess, Mehta, Pruss-Ustun 2006 UNDP 2005 Duflo, Greenstone, Hanna 2008 UNDP 2007 The problem has been discussed ad nauseam. The solution has yet to be found. Taufik Indrakesuma (@SEAsiaEnergy on Twitter) © 2011 asiantrendsmonitoring.com solid fuels, sad truths ASIAN TRENDS MONITORING THE DISEASE BURDEN Men exposed to indoor air pollution from solid fuels, such as wood, dung and charcoal, are 1.8 times more likely to contract chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Women are 3.2 times more likely. Children below 5 are 2.3 times more likely to contract acute respiratory infections. - WHO, 2006 Philippines Population still using solid fuels for cooking, 2008 (%) Persistent problems for the poor Indonesia POVERTY Vietnam Cambodia SOLID FUEL СОOKING Laos GATHERING FIREWOOD Myanmar 20 40 AIR POLLUTION & ILLNESS 60 Source: UN MDG Indicators Database 80 100 Over 250 million people in ASEAN are still reliant on solid fuels for cooking their meals and heating their homes. SCHOOL ABSENTEES Раpers & İEA 2010 World Bank 2003 Schei et a reports on Ezzati & Kammen 2002 ITDG 1998 Lin et solid fuel Pokhrel et al. 2005 WHO 2006 Edwards et al. 2007WHO 2O Smith & Mehta 2003. Bruce et al. 2004 Diaz et al 2 Rehfuess, Mehta, Pruss-Ustun 2006 UNDP 2005 Duflo, Greenstone, Hanna 2008 UNDP 2007 The problem has been discussed ad nauseam. The solution has yet to be found. Taufik Indrakesuma (@SEAsiaEnergy on Twitter) © 2011 asiantrendsmonitoring.com

What would you do if cooking endangered your life?

shared by rmmojado on Dec 28
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The question that haunted me throughout the process: Given all of the technological advancements and successes of existing small-scale projects, why has it been so difficult for governments to replica...

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