Content ID:
Field:


  • About Smithsonian
  • Email Updates
  • Member Services
  • Shop
  • Archive
Smithsonian.com
  • Smithsonian Institution
  • Smithsonian Channel
  • goSmithsonian
  • Air & Space magazine
  • Home
  • History & Archaeology
  • People & Places
  • Science & Nature
  • Arts & Culture
  • Travel
  • Photos & Videos
  • Games & Puzzles
  • Subscribe
Christina Galitsky Researcher Galitsky wanted “to work on problems that had a direct impact on people’s lives.”

Gerry Gropp

  • Innovators

Hot Idea

Christina Galitsky's energy-efficient cookstove makes life a little easier for Darfur's refugees

  • By Neil Henry
  • Smithsonian magazine, October 2007

Article Tools

 
  • Font
  • Share/Save/Bookmark Share
     
  • Email
  •  
  • Print
  • Digg Digg
     
  • Comments
  • StumbleUpon StumbleUpon
     
  • RSS
  • Reddit Reddit
     

    New Ways to Live Energy Efficient

    Smithsonian.com

    Six individuals explore new energy sources and rethink new ways on how to conserve energy

    The Last Word

    Smithsonian.com

    A quick questionnaire with Christina Galitsky

    Related Links

    America's Young Innovators

    Most Popular

    • Viewed
    • Emailed
    1. The Ultimate Spy Plane
    2. Photo Contest Grand Prize Winner - In the early morning, fishermen clean their nets by Erhai Lake
    3. Catching a Wave, Powering an Electrical Grid?
    4. Photo Contest Finalist - A mountain dwarfs a passenger boat in the Three Gorges area of the Yangzi River
    5. Photo Contest Finalist - Ganga Arati
    6. Photo Contest Finalist - After a hard night's work at sea, a fisherman collects the rope that ties the nets
    7. Photo Contest Travel Winner - Dining in Gion
    8. Frank Baum, the Man Behind the Curtain
    9. Photo Contest Finalist - Erik in the World’s Greatest Store
    10. Photo Contest Finalist - Michel Frazier plays in the fields next to her trailer
    1. There Oughta Be a Law
    2. Frank Baum, the Man Behind the Curtain
    3. Photo Contest Grand Prize Winner - In the early morning, fishermen clean their nets by Erhai Lake
    4. Catching a Wave, Powering an Electrical Grid?
    5. High Hopes for a New Kind of Gene
    6. Terra Cotta Soldiers on the March
    7. Up in Arms Over a Co-Ed Plebe Summer
    8. The Ultimate Spy Plane
    9. Photo Contest Finalist - Jujing Village
    10. Photo Contest Finalist - Walk on Water

    Nearly three years ago, Christina Galitsky joined a team of scientists who had been asked an urgent question. Was it possible for researchers at California's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL), where she is an engineer, to devise an expedient method for the displaced of war-torn Darfur to cook their meals?

    For the more than two million people uprooted by Sudan's genocidal civil war since 2003, it is a life-and-death question. "The refugee women," says Galitsky, "had long ago exhausted supplies of wood near the [refugee] camps. As a result, they were forced to move farther and farther into the surrounding country in a search for cooking fuel." When they did so, marauding Arab militias—who had attacked and raped many women in their villages, forcing them to flee—were again able to prey on them. Their gathering of wood was also ravaging the arid, ecologically fragile region.

    In 2005, Galitsky and physicist Ashok Gadgil, an LBNL senior scientist, proposed a solution: a highly energy-efficient and portable cookstove, one that, Galitsky says, would "sharply reduce the need for refugees to leave the camps."

    But Gadgil and Galitsky then had to persuade the refugees to use the stove—a sheet-metal cylindrical contraption two feet high and 14 inches in diameter. Galitsky and Gadgil went to Darfur in November 2005. There, says Gadgil, Galitsky came into her own. "Christie is not only an outstanding thinker who applies her mind to solving real-world problems," he says, "she's a risk taker in the best sense of the word."

    Galitsky's job was demonstrating the stove to the wary women, who were used to balancing pots on stones over a wood fire, as their ancestors had done for centuries. She was able to show that in the new stove making a pot of assida, the dough-like Sudanese staple of flour, oil and water, used only half as much wood.

    "The conditions were appalling," recalls Galitsky, 34. "People were living on top of each other, in little [mud huts] crammed together. You could see the desperation everywhere, the terror in their eyes and voices. Some of the women showed knife wounds."

    But helping them was just what Galitsky had been looking to do. In 1999, after earning an M.S. in chemical engineering from the University of California at Berkeley, she opted out of a PhD program to put her training to immediate, more practical use. She landed a job in the Environmental Energy Technology Division at LBNL, where she began to work on, among other projects, the development of an inexpensive filter to remove arsenic from drinking water in Bangladesh. "I wanted to work on problems that had a direct, profound impact on people's lives," she says, "things like clean water or clean air, things we need just to live."

    The impact was even more direct in Darfur, where refugees appear to like the stoves. "We're hoping news of the stove spreads even more by word of mouth in the camps," she says, "which is the way most things like this have to work." Late last year, when 50 Sudanese families were given an opportunity to buy the stoves—at $2.50 apiece—every one of them took it.

    1 2

    Nearly three years ago, Christina Galitsky joined a team of scientists who had been asked an urgent question. Was it possible for researchers at California's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL), where she is an engineer, to devise an expedient method for the displaced of war-torn Darfur to cook their meals?

    For the more than two million people uprooted by Sudan's genocidal civil war since 2003, it is a life-and-death question. "The refugee women," says Galitsky, "had long ago exhausted supplies of wood near the [refugee] camps. As a result, they were forced to move farther and farther into the surrounding country in a search for cooking fuel." When they did so, marauding Arab militias—who had attacked and raped many women in their villages, forcing them to flee—were again able to prey on them. Their gathering of wood was also ravaging the arid, ecologically fragile region.

    In 2005, Galitsky and physicist Ashok Gadgil, an LBNL senior scientist, proposed a solution: a highly energy-efficient and portable cookstove, one that, Galitsky says, would "sharply reduce the need for refugees to leave the camps."

    But Gadgil and Galitsky then had to persuade the refugees to use the stove—a sheet-metal cylindrical contraption two feet high and 14 inches in diameter. Galitsky and Gadgil went to Darfur in November 2005. There, says Gadgil, Galitsky came into her own. "Christie is not only an outstanding thinker who applies her mind to solving real-world problems," he says, "she's a risk taker in the best sense of the word."

    Galitsky's job was demonstrating the stove to the wary women, who were used to balancing pots on stones over a wood fire, as their ancestors had done for centuries. She was able to show that in the new stove making a pot of assida, the dough-like Sudanese staple of flour, oil and water, used only half as much wood.

    "The conditions were appalling," recalls Galitsky, 34. "People were living on top of each other, in little [mud huts] crammed together. You could see the desperation everywhere, the terror in their eyes and voices. Some of the women showed knife wounds."

    But helping them was just what Galitsky had been looking to do. In 1999, after earning an M.S. in chemical engineering from the University of California at Berkeley, she opted out of a PhD program to put her training to immediate, more practical use. She landed a job in the Environmental Energy Technology Division at LBNL, where she began to work on, among other projects, the development of an inexpensive filter to remove arsenic from drinking water in Bangladesh. "I wanted to work on problems that had a direct, profound impact on people's lives," she says, "things like clean water or clean air, things we need just to live."

    The impact was even more direct in Darfur, where refugees appear to like the stoves. "We're hoping news of the stove spreads even more by word of mouth in the camps," she says, "which is the way most things like this have to work." Late last year, when 50 Sudanese families were given an opportunity to buy the stoves—at $2.50 apiece—every one of them took it.

    Today, metalworkers in Khartoum, the capital, manufacture the stoves, with 200 delivered to Darfur's camps this past summer. If additional funding can be raised, aid workers in Khartoum hope to produce 30,000 stoves in the near future. An international aid organization, GlobalGiving, oversees contributions to the project. Back in her office in LBNL's Building 90, high in the pine- and eucalyptus-covered hills overlooking the Berkeley campus, Galitsky says she continues "to think about what is really important in work. I believe everyone needs to decide that for themselves. I hope the answer is less often ‘make money' and more often about contributing to society in some way—whatever way makes sense to you."

    Neil Henry, a professor of journalism at the University of California at Berkeley, is the author of American Carnival: Journalism under Siege in an Age of New Media.


     
    Comments

    I'd like to purchase one of Christina Galitsky's cookstoves for my own personal use here in the U.S. Can some one send me some contact info? Thanks, Laurel S. Fisher

    Posted by Laurel S. Fisher on December 30,2007 | 05:38PM

    she has very desirable and devoted attitude towards the world. I hope I could be a person like her.

    Posted by Hee Seon Yoon on February 25,2008 | 04:08AM

    i have close friends who could use this invention/idea where they are missionaries in Africa. Could I get more info. Thanks, plse respond via email: mckee.lee@gmail.com

    Posted by L.Mark McKee on January 22,2009 | 07:28AM

    I have a friend who could take this idea & the finances to have this manfactured & distributed to the poor in peru/ any info would be appreciated rainbowsend1999@aol.com

    Posted by Gerald whitener on February 4,2009 | 09:11PM

    Post a Comment


    Name: (required)

    Email: (required)

    Comment:



    Advertisement

    Smithsonian Videos

    Counting Down for the Liftoff to the Moon

    Counting Down for the Liftoff to the Moon

    Photographer David Burnett focused his camera on the many tourists who flocked to Florida in 1969 to watch the launch of Apollo 11

    Lucian Perkins Images

    A Navy Plebe Re-Meets His Match

    Photojournalist Lucian Perkins reunites Naval Academy graduates Sandee Irwin and Don Holcomb, 30 years after his photo captured the new gender dynamics at the school

    Deploying the Wave Energy Buoy

    Deploying the Wave Energy Buoy

    See a prototype of a wave energy buoy bob up and down on the water’s surface as researchers from Oregon State University study its efficacy

    Nikita Khrushchevs Great American Tour

    Nikita Khrushchev's Great American Tour

    As part of a diplomatic mission, Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev traveled across the United States, meeting Americans from New York to Iowa to California

    Terra Cotta Soldiers

    Uncovering the Terra Cotta Soldiers

    A curator from the Houston Museum of Natural Science explains how the terra cotta warriors were discovered and what they reveal about China’s Qin dynasty

    Advertisement

    Culturespotter

    New at Viva Mexico

    Mexico is home to 43 active volcanoes and over 10% of all living organisms. Discover Mexico's natural (and social) diversity in the all-new "Mexican Culture" section.

    Marketplace

    SmithsonianStore

    Night at the Museum Plush Monkey
    Item No. 67925

    Window Shopping

    Gifts, Gadgets and Great Finds!

    From Our Advertisers: Products, Offers and Free Info

    Travel & Adventure

    Backstage on Broadway

    Meet theater professionals and see three Broadway's hits including Billy Elliot and Next to Normal (Nov. 18 - 22, 2009)

    Sojourners

    Join Us

    Facebook

    Facebook

    Become a fan of Smithsonian magazine's official Facebook page!

    Twitter

    Follow Smithsonian magazine on Twitter

    In The Magazine

    July 2009 Issue Cover

    July 2009

    • On the March
    • Nikita in Hollywood
    • We Have Liftoff
    • Birth of a Robot
    • Catching a Wave

    View Table of Contents



    Smithsonian magazine presents

    6th Annual Smithsonian Photo Contest Winners

    Out of more than 17,000 entries contributed from around the world, Smithsonian and its readers select the year's best

    Smithsonian Connections

    Connect to Lincoln

    Smithsonian Connections Connects You To Abraham Lincoln. Share ideas, thoughts, and more.

    Smithsonian Journeys

    Lake Como and Villa del Balbianello, Villas and Vistas of the Italian Lake District Villas and Vistas of the Italian Lake District
    A stay amid romantic Lake Como and Lake Maggiore



    View full archiveRecent Issues

    • July 2009 Issue Cover
      Jul 2009

    • June 2009 Issue Cover
      Jun 2009

    • May 2009 Issue Cover
      May 2009

    Newsletter

    Sign up for regular email updates from Smithsonian magazine, including free newsletters, special offers and current news updates.

    Subscribe Now

    About Us

    Smithsonian.com expands on Smithsonian magazine's in-depth coverage of history, science, nature, the arts, travel, world culture and technology. Join us regularly as we take a dynamic and interactive approach to exploring modern and historic perspectives on the arts, sciences, nature, world culture and travel, including videos, blogs and a reader forum.

    Explore our Brands

    • goSmithsonian.com
    • Smithsonian Air & Space Museum
    • Smithsonian Institution
    • Smithsonian Catalogue
    • Smithsonian Journeys
    • Smithsonian Channel
    • Site Map
    • Privacy Policy
    • Copyright
    • About Smithsonian
    • Contact Us
    • Advertising
    • Reader Panel
    • Subscribe
    • RSS

    Smithsonian Institution

    Produced by Clickability