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One
of Timor-Leste's first environmental NGOs is using local materials
and appropriate technology to ease the pressure on the country's
fragile steep-slope forests and help keep the air clean. Specialist
trainers from Haburas Foundation are teaching the residents of
three villages in Lautem and Alieu districts how to make energy-efficient
clay cooking stoves.
Timor-Leste's separation from Indonesia five years ago brought
independence, but it also meant an end to heavily subsidized fuel
prices. Many residents in Southeast Asia's poorest country cannot
afford to pay world market prices for liquid petroleum gas now
charged in Timor-Leste, so they use firewood for cooking. This
sudden increase in demand for firewood threatens forested areas
near settlements across the nation, and increasing levels of wood
smoke translate into an added burden on already limited health
services.
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Haburas Foundation is addressing these problems with its simple,
energy-efficient clay stove design. After the three-day training
sessions, residents in the three pilot villages know how to collect
and prepare the clay, craft the stoves, and fire them. All materials
are available locally. The stoves still need firewood, but much
less than open pits, and residents of highland areas can use dried
coffee husks for fuel. The husks are plentiful and free after
the end of the coffee harvest in August.
Under the Haburas pilot project, the Mua Puhu ("stoves from
the land") group in Asalaino village, Lautem district, has
produced more than 180 stoves. Members want to form a cooperative
to continue making the stoves and sell them in neighboring villages.
"We are interested in increasing our business opportunities,"
explained group coordinator Lucinda Mota, who thinks the stoves
won't be hard to sell. "We want to tell other communities
about the stoves because they are very cheap and efficient. It
is also a good way to teach our children to protect their environment."
She added, "And besides, the stoves use less firewood and
cook food faster."
USAID supports the environmental work of the Haburas Foundation
with grants totaling $29,000. Its efforts boost environmental
awareness, generate employment, and mitigate negative economic
and health impacts from pollution and environmental degradation.

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