Briquettes Made From Coconut Waste Could Reduce Deforestation | World Wide Waste
Business Insider・2 minutes read
Alhaji Siraj Ba created cooking fuel from coconut shells to address deforestation, aiming to produce 10 tons of briquettes by 2022 and sell them for 70 cents per kilogram. His goal is to encourage the use of coconut briquettes as a sustainable alternative to wood-based charcoal in Freetown to help save trees and combat deforestation.
Insights
- Alhaji Siraj Ba created a sustainable cooking fuel recipe from coconut shells to address deforestation linked to tree chopping for stoves.
- Rogue Stall Trading, led by Alhaji, processes two metric tons of coconut waste weekly to make briquettes, with a target of 10 tons by the end of 2022, priced at 70 cents per kilogram to encourage usage over wood-based charcoal, promoting tree conservation.
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Recent questions
How did Alhaji Siraj Ba combat deforestation?
By developing a recipe for cooking fuel from coconut shells.
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