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Back to Newspaper articles archive: 2005


Beliefs inspire invention of stove


Crispin Pemberton-Pigott with the Vesto stove.

MATSAPHA, Swaziland, 30 March 2005 (BWNS) -- Setting out to design a stove for developing countries, Crispin Pemberton-Pigott began by imagining how many trees might be saved if he invented an inexpensive, efficient wood-burning cooker.

Mr. Pemberton-Pigott is the head of New Dawn Engineering in Swaziland, an appropriate technology design and manufacturing company that serves southern Africa.

He moved from Canada to Africa 28 years ago and cites his practice of the Baha'i Faith as the inspiration behind New Dawn's efforts to design and manufacture economical machines for Africa's villages.

"The Baha'i writings speak of the importance of initiating 'measures which would universally enrich the masses of the people,'" said Mr. Pemberton-Pigott. "They say there can be 'no undertaking greater than this.'"

"In a way, the Vesto stove began as a flight of fancy, to see if I could bring to market an innovative stove that ignored the nay-sayers who said a commercially viable, highly efficient stove cannot be made cheaply," he said.

"If it worked, we could save a very large number of people the effort of cutting down trees, and at the same time avoid the need to plant a lot of new trees for fuel," he said.

Mr. Pemberton-Pigott's "flight of fancy" has paid off. The stove burns just one-quarter of the wood needed to cook on an open fire, and it is virtually smokeless. New Dawn has sold more than 1,000 of the new stoves since its invention in early 2002.


Cutaway model of the Vesto stove showing the chambers that preheat the incoming air, boosting the stove's efficiency.

Moreover, the stove was honored last year by the Design Institute of South Africa (DISA), taking the top Chairman's Special Award, which called it "an outstanding piece of design which is of the highest international standard."

"The relatively low retail price brings the Vesto stove within reach of people at the lower end of the economic scale," the Award citation reads. Judging criteria included innovation, cost/value relationship, performance, safety and ergonomics, environmental impact, appearance, and ease of installation and maintenance.

"That is the highest such design award that we know of in Africa," said Mr. Pemberton-Pigott. The stove also won recently in the Houseware category at an annual event held by the South African Bureau of Standards. And the Stainless Steel Development Association gave the product a Merit Award for the innovative use of stainless steel.

Founded by Mr. Pemberton-Pigott and his wife, Margaret, in 1984, New Dawn makes a wide range of simple but highly efficient machines for use at the village level in developing regions. In addition to the Vesto and other stoves, these machines include hand-operated oil presses and rock crushers, fence makers, and various brick and roof tile makers.


The interior of the Vesto stove.

"We believe that labor-intensive equipment and virtuous social and economic development can be catalysts not only for third world countries, but for illustrating a better future for mankind," said Mr. Pemberton-Pigott. "In this day, actions must exceed words."

How it works

The portable Vesto stove burns wood and dung more efficiently and with fewer emissions than conventional stoves. Dung, especially, is a notoriously low-yield and smoky fuel but is used in some regions of Africa, such as Ethiopia, where no other fuel is available.

The key to this efficiency, said Mr. Pemberton-Pigott, is a design that pre-heats incoming air while using that air to insulate the fire and prevent heat loss.

"This increases the efficiency of burning low quality fuel, like dung, by up to six fold," said Mr. Pemberton-Pigott.

The Vesto has three types of secondary air inlets, allowing it to function as both a charcoal-producing gasifier and a charcoal burning, wood burning, or dung burning stove.

Another feature of the Vesto design is that it can be manufactured relatively simply. "Its production does not require complex and expensive tooling or high capital expenditure," said Mr. Pemberton-Pigott. "Many innovative stoves are so elaborate that they are almost impossible to make in a simple environment. In designing this stove, we sought both simplicity and extreme efficiency."

Based on a modified 25-liter paint can, the stove sells for about US$29.00. If sales increase, and more units are produced, that price will drop further, said Mr. Pemberton-Pigott.

In addition to burning fuel more efficiently -- a considerable benefit in a region where forests are becoming increasingly difficult to sustain -- the stove also offers innovative safety measures.

"Stoves are a major source of health problems for women and children," said Mr. Pemberton-Pigott. "The Vesto addresses these by being safe to use -- not very hot on the outside."

Unlike a paraffin stove, the Vesto contains its fire in a gas-insulated tin, which not only makes it cooler to the touch but confines the fire if the stove is knocked over.

In addition, the fact that the Vesto burns virtually any biomass fuel means that households can move away from the use of expensive charcoal.

"African cities use huge amounts of charcoal, produced at despairingly low conversion rates from virgin forests," said Mr. Pemberton-Pigott. "No one has ever converted a large urban population from charcoal back to wood.


Designed around a modified 25-liter paint can, the Vesto stove sells for about US$29 and is about four times more efficient than an open fire.

"Doing so would also save large tracts of forest because the wood is so much more efficient in terms of the total heat in the fuel and the total amount of cooking done by it compared with charcoal.

"To achieve this, it would be necessary to have a stove that burned charcoal well and wood very well," said Mr. Pemberton-Pigott. "People might buy it as a fast-lighting charcoal stove, but then sooner or later they would run out of charcoal and try burning wood."

"They would immediately realize that the lower cost wood was a good or even better fuel than the charcoal had been," said Mr. Pemberton-Pigott.

The Moya Center for Orphans and Vulnerable Children in Swaziland recently received a donation of four Vesto stoves for its child-headed households.

"All of these children had been using firewood and an open fire to cook their food," said Jane Cox, director of the Moya Center. "And their 'kitchens' are a smoke trap and particularly unhealthy.

"I have been back to these households [since they got stoves] and they speak with one voice," said Ms. Cox. "They use a fraction of the firewood they had been using, with the amazing result of water boiling within 10 minutes and no smoke visible."

For more information about the Vesto stove, see http://www.newdawnengineering.com/website/stove/singlestove/vesto/vesto1.php.

BWC-BP-050330-1-STOVE-360-F


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