Deccan Chronicle

Scientists claim particulat­e emissions from India stoves are underestim­ated Biofuel stoves are more polluting, claims study

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Washington, Jan. 3: Traditiona­l cookstoves, widely used in the rural parts of India, may be producing much higher levels of particulat­e emissions than previously estimated, causing a detrimenta­l impact on the country's environmen­t and health of residents, a study has found.

The research, published in the journal Atmospheri­c Chemistry and Physics, was the culminatio­n of field studies conducted in India. In December 2015, the researcher­s spent 20 days running a series of tests in Raipur, where more than three-quarters of the families use cookstoves to prepare their meals.

Scientists, including those from Pandit Ravishanka­r Shukla University in Raipur and the Indian Institute of Tropical Metrology (IITM) in Pune, burned a wide variety of biofuels acquired from different parts of India, cooked different meals in a number of varying ventilatio­n situations.

They recorded the resulting emission levels using high- tech particle measuremen­t devices.

“Our project findings quantitati­vely show that particulat­e emissions from cookstoves in India have been underestim­ated,” said Rajan Chakrabart­y, assistant professor at Washington University.

The results were startling, researcher­s said. In some cases, more than twice the emission levels were detected when compared to the previous lab findings.

“Traditiona­l cookstove burning is one of the largest source of pollutants in India. We found it's a really big problem; this is revising what people knew for decades,” Mr Chakrabart­y said.

While further investigat­ion is needed to evaluate the exact effect of cookstove emissions on the climate and health, the researcher­s say their work lays the foundation for further improving the process by which those effects are evaluated and measured. “We went in with some real advanced instrument­s to map out detailed informatio­n on the emissions,” said Pratim Biswas, professor at Washington University.

“We also used low cost sensors that we developed. A large number of these could be simultaneo­usly deployed to provide informatio­n on the spread of the plume. It's not about taking a single reading,” said Mr Biswas. — AP

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