Thursday, April 9, 2009

Cardboard Oven For The Win

Cardboard box oven 1, firewood 0.
When Jon Bohmer sat down with his two little girls for a simple project they could work on together, he didn't realize they'd hit upon a solution to one of the world's biggest problems for just $5: A solar-powered oven.

The ingeniously simple design uses two cardboard boxes, one inside the other, and an acrylic cover that lets in the sun's rays and traps them.

Black paint on the inner box, and silver foil on the outer one, help concentrate the heat. The trapped rays make the inside hot enough to cook casseroles, bake bread and boil water.

What the box also does is eliminate the need in developing countries for rural residents to cut down trees for firewood. About 3 billion people around the world do so, adding to deforestation and, in turn, global warming.

By allowing users to boil water, the simple device could also potentially save the millions of children who die from drinking unclean water.

Bohmer's invention on Thursday won the FT Climate Change Challenge, which sought to find and publicize the most innovative and practical solution to climate change.

"A lot of scientists are working on ways to send people to Mars. I was looking for something a little more grassroots, a little simpler," Bohmer said Thursday.

This is outstanding and it's hard to think why anyone hasn't done this before. I remember creating cardboard ovens in shop class as a project 20 years ago, and just now we're getting around to using this as a major solution to the world's carbon footprint?

Geez. Anyway, good to see this is being done. I'd buy one of these myself just to see how they would work around here in the summer. Talk about a cookout!

New (long overdue) tag: EPIC WIN.

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