[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 39 (Monday, March 10, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Page S1418]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
By Ms. COLLINS (for herself and Mr. Durbin):
S. 2100. A bill to promote the use of clean cookstoves and fuels to
save lives, improve livelihoods, empower women, and protect the
environment by creating a thriving global market for clean and
efficient household cooking solutions; to the Committee on Foreign
Relations.
Ms. COLLINS. Mr. President, I rise today to introduce the Clean
Cookstove Support Act. This legislation addresses a serious global
public health and environmental issue, and I am very pleased to be
joined in this effort by my friend and colleague, Senator Durbin.
Nearly half of the world's population cooks over open fires or with
inefficient, polluting, and unsafe cookstoves using wood, agricultural
waste, dung, coal, or other solid fuels. Smoke from these traditional
cookstoves and open fires is associated with chronic and acute diseases
and affects women and children disproportionately.
Alarmingly, the Global Burden of Disease Study of 2010 doubled the
mortality estimates for exposure to smoke from cookstoves referred to
as household air pollution from 2 million to 4 million deaths annually
in the developing world. The GBD indicates this is more than the deaths
from malaria, tuberculosis, and HIV/AIDS combined. The GBD ranks
household air pollution as the fourth worst overall health risk factor
in the world and as the second worst health risk factor in the world
for women and girls. Millions more are sickened from the toxic smoke
and thousands suffer burns annually from open fires or unsafe
cookstoves.
Traditional cookstoves also create serious environmental problems.
Recent studies show that the emissions of black carbon or common soot
from biomass cookstoves significantly contribute to regional air and
climate change. In fact, cookstoves account for some 25 percent of
black carbon emissions. Each family using a traditional cookstove can
require up to 2 tons of biomass cooking fuel, and where demand for fuel
outstrips the natural regrowth of resources, local land degradation and
loss of biodiversity often results.
Moreover, the collection of this fuel is a burden that is shouldered
disproportionately by women and children. In some regions of the world,
women and girls risk rape and gender-based violence during the up to 20
hours a week they spend away from their families gathering fuel.
Replacing these cookstoves with modern alternatives would help
reverse these alarming health and environmental trends. This would be
relatively inexpensive. In fact, there are stoves that are coming on
the market now that cost as little as $20 and are 50 percent more
efficient than the traditional cooking methods. It also could be done
quickly. It is what scientists call the low-hanging fruit of
environmental fixes.
Through the leadership of former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
and the United Nations Foundation, the Global Alliance for Clean
Cookstoves was formed in 2010. Recognizing the serious health and
environmental issues posed by traditional cookstoves, the alliance aims
to save lives, improve livelihoods, empower women, and combat pollution
by creating a thriving global market for clean and efficient household
cooking solutions. Alliance partners are working to help overcome
market barriers that currently impede production, deployment, and use
of cookstoves that are clean in the developing world.
To assist in this important endeavor, several Federal agencies and
departments have committed a total of up to $125 million to the sector
for the first 5 years of the alliance. These include a wide variety of
departments, including the Departments of State, Energy, and Health and
Human Services, the U.S. Agency for International Development, USAID,
the Environmental Protection Agency, the National Science Foundation,
and the Overseas Private Investment Corporation. The U.S. Department of
Agriculture, NOAA, and the Peace Corps have also made commitments to
provide technical assistance in the developing world.
To help advance the alliance's goal to spur the adoption of clean
cookstoves in 100 million households by the year 2020, the U.S.
Government has focused its commitments on applied research and
development, diplomatic engagement to encourage a market for clean
cookstoves, and to improve access, international development projects
to help build commercial businesses, and development efforts, including
humanitarian and empowerment programs for women and girls.
The legislation Senator Durbin and I are introducing today reinforces
this commitment and would require the Secretary of State to work to
advance the goals of the alliance. In addition, the bill authorizes the
existing funding commitments made by our government to ensure that
these crucial pledges toward preventing unnecessary illness and
reducing pollution around the globe are met.
By supporting the work of the alliance and the commitments of the
U.S. Government to replace traditional cookstoves with modern versions
that emit far less soot, this bill aims to directly benefit some of the
world's poorest people and to reduce harmful pollution that affects us
all. It offers a way for us to address the second leading contributor
to greenhouse gas emissions in a way that is inexpensive, not
burdensome to the people of this country, and will benefit poor people
living in developing nations.
There is yet another reason for my colleagues to support this
initiative. Addressing persistent global issues of poverty and
underdevelopment makes our country more secure by undercutting some of
the key drivers of extremism and militancy around the world.
I urge my colleagues to join Senator Durbin and me in supporting the
Clean Cookstoves and Fuel Support Act.
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