With support from UNDP through the Ecosystem-Based Adaptation (EbA) in Mountains Programme, the group started constructing and promoting the use of energy saving stoves.
‘Lorena’ stoves are fuel-efficient - using half as much wood as those most frequently used in rural. Lorena stoves are made from locally made, widely available materials such as mud and water. The stoves are designed to enclose the heat produced by burning wood. By enclosing the stove, smoke is drawn into the chimney pipes and then expelled from the kitchen, generating less carbon dioxide, as well as other air pollutants such as particulate matter which can cause acute respiratory and eye infections.
“We thought if we had the cook stoves we could save trees. Cutting down the trees was a problem to our nature. Soil was washed away. We are farmers. Soil erosion and landslides are difficult. Our crops will not grow if they are washed away. Now we are saving trees.” Nambazu Ambrose, Chairman, Nabuzo Environmental Conservation Group.
“My life has changed greatly. The new stove uses less wood, and we can cook all 3 pots at the same time. I used to spend the whole day gathering firewood that would only last for two days. 1 bundle now lasts 1 week with a new cookstove. I can now spend more time with my goats and farming.” – Agnes Nabusema, Nabuzo village in Sironko district, Mt. Elgon, Eastern Uganda.
The global Ecosystem-Based Adaptation (EbA) in Mountains Programme is a partnership between UNDP, UNEP and IUCN, with funding from the German Government (BMUB)’s International Climate Initiative. By using sustainable management, conservation and restoration of ecosystems, as part of an overall EbA strategy, the Programme aims to reduce the vulnerability and enhance the resilience of select fragile mountain ecosystems and their local communities to climate change impacts. The promoted EbA measures carefully take into account anticipated climate change impact trends to help communities continuously adapt to a changing climate and increasing uncertainty. This global partnership also involves national and regional government agencies, civil society and local communities in three countries (Uganda, Nepal and Peru).
The activities supported by UNDP in Nabuzo Village are part of a broader suite of EbA measures supported by the Programme in Uganda. Championed by the Government of Uganda and working with the Ministry of Water and Environment, these efforts are expected to contribute to maintaining natural ecosystems, and to produce not only ecological, but also economic, social, and health benefits for the community.
For more information on the EbA work, please visit: www.undp-alm.org/projects/mountain-EbA.
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