Deforestation in Zimbabwe continues to spread at a high rate due to the over reliance on firewood in the rural areas. Indicators attribute this to be a key factor in some of the extreme weather change patterns that have affected several parts of the country. Climate change-induced drought has been traced in the southern parts of Zimbabwe like Mwenezi where people are inevitably forced to rely on wood for both cooking and selling to earn an income.
This has several negative impacts not only on the environment but also on the health and safety of women and girls.
The time-consuming responsibility of fetching firewood is assigned to girls leaving them vulnerable to abuse and at a disadvantage when it comes to studying as they have less time. Indoor pollution from open fires exposes women and children to smoke and soot leading to respiratory diseases.
Use of wood as a source of energy is deeply ingrained in the community. For Sister Hlongwani a 61-year-old woman who lives with her family of nine in Neshuro Village, Mwenezi District, wood has been their lifeblood for several generations. She, at the same time, has seen the grazing lands and forests diminishing through the years. “For several years, firewood has been the source of energy we could afford because of its convenience and easy access,” said Sister.
CARE International in Zimbabwe, Plan International, and ICRISAT working with the community in Neshuro, through the Zimbabwe Resilience Building Fund- Enhancing Community Resilience and Sustainability (ECRAS) project, set about to establish an alternative and reusable source of energy, a biodigester.
The biodigester is a fixed dome with an airtight underground tank in which organic materials mixed with water are digested with water through anaerobic bacterial action to generate biogas fuel. Biogas is a gas produced by the biological breakdown of organic matter by bacteria in the absence of oxygen (anaerobic process), and therefore it is a product of anaerobic digestion or fermentation of biodegradable materials. The main source of feed for the fixed dome biodigesters is cow dung. The biogas slurry which is produced as waste is an effective fertilizer substitute that benefits the farmer through the replacement of chemical fertilizers. The family is now saving an average of three hours per day which they normally spent looking for the traditional sources of cooking energy.
Sister’s home was one of the model households supported with materials such as cement and piping to construct a cubic biogas digester. This has brought transformation in the community as Sister explained, “Now, our lives have improved since we started using biogas.” One biogas digester can cater to a family of 12 per day, hence two households can prepare three meals a day on the system.