 The First Solar Community Kitchen by Louise Meyer
First published in Swiss Review, No.2, 2001
-- Louise Meyer reports from
a trip to Egypt.
Alex Gagneux, the Swiss mechanical engineer
responsible for building this kitchen was first brought into a project by
Anna Marie Wenger-Marti, an elementary school teacher who lives near Berne.
In 1990, she began teaching literate women to solar cook.
Her
students live in "New Communities" located in the northern sugar-beet zone
south-west of Alexandria. Each woman bought one-family sized box cookers
built by a local carpenter for $30 each.
On January 10, 2001, we
traveled north on the desert road towards Alexandria to visit El Sherouk
Farm, a plantation located 72 km away from Cairo. I knew from my Swiss
partners that Egypt’s first Solar Community Kitchen had been completed five
months earlier when it was officially inaugurated by the Swiss ambassador to
Egypt. I was curious to see how this community kitchen, able to cook for 300
functioned. Although I had trained hundreds of women to solar cook in Kenya,
Ethiopia, and Zimbabwe I had only seen photographs of institutional solar
kitchens.
January is the winter season in Egypt, evenings are
cool but most every day brings with it a cloudless sky and pleasant
temperatures. Solar cooking can be done here year round! Dr. Adel El
Ghandour, one of the owners of El Sherouk Farm organized our transportation
from Cairo. I was accompanied by two Swiss, Dr. Denham Pole and his
assistant, Mona, who both live in Egypt and work for the Swiss Red Cross on
a project improving blood transfusion services. Before the installation of
the Solar Community Kitchen El Sherouk Farm management had to truck in
bottled gas for the workers to cook their food with. Dr. Adel El Ghandour
stated that cooking "was much more convenient every since Alec Gagneux
completed the kitchen", explaining that it was being used daily.
An Egyptian "solar pioneer"
Dr. El Ghandour took us on a
tour together with two other visitors, both agronomists from the
Horticulture research Institute in Giza. We walked through the "kitchen", a
building composed of two rooms; one where dining space was provided for
about 100 people; a second with a sink, a traditional stove fueled with
bottled gas which was not in use and two huge pots. The pots sat up on
two-foot pedestals against the wall outside. The cook picked the lid up off
one of the pots to show us that the beans were boiling. We exited through
the back door onto a cemented patio area holding two parabolic reflectors.
It was the solar radiation reflected off the parabolic discs that was being
projected onto the pots that provided cooking "fuel". The
reflectors were composed of over 100 mirrors each attached to the next with
twisted wire and fixed to a large frame. All materials were purchased
locally. The total cost per unit was $1000. Dr. El Ghandour paid for all the
materials plus a portion of Alec Gagneux’s honorarium, a clear indication of
his willingness to invest in renewable energy making him into an Egyptian
"solar pioneer".
From outside the patio area where we now
stood, we could see the pots through the open port-holes.the solar
reflection on each pot looked similar to fire. We saw that paper immediately
caught fire when placed at the focus point. Cooking time is equivalent to
traditional fire cooking. Both solar reflectors were equipped with a
tracking system in order to follow the sun’s rays; one with a mechanical and
the second with a photovoltaic.
After our visit Dr. El Ghandour
invited us to his office. He explained his wishes to introduce a totally
integrated energy system at El Sherouk and that the next step would be
making biogas from waste. The Minister of Agriculture had sent agronomists
to visit El Sherouk to assess the possibility of replicating it elsewhere,
such as in the Toshka Project, south-west of Luxor, where the Egyptian
government hoped to win back farm land from the desert. On this 2nd trip to
Egypt I realized that most every part of the country offered a perfect
climate for solar cooking, with perhaps the exception of Cairo where air
pollution might prevent.
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