SCIENCE HERO: PAUL MUNSEN - SOLAR OVEN MAN
by Wendy Jewell
If Paul Munsen had the attention of the world for 10
minutes, he would bake. Well, bake and talk. He
would let people see how simple it is to cook with a
solar oven. And he would share the global benefits of
using the best renewable resource
the sun
to
cook. We would learn that when a family of 8 uses a
global sun oven, over 4 tons of wood a year is saved.
Plus, 5.2 tons of emissions will NOT be released into
the atmosphere. Women and children will not have to
risk their lives foraging for wood or inhale the equivalent
of 2 packs of cigarettes a day by cooking over a fire.
Munsen could actually talk for days about this path
he has found himself on, 8 years after giving a little
marketing advice to a fellow Rotarian, that changed
his life forever. After seeing the need and worthiness
of this endeavor, he took over the reins from the original
sun oven inventor, Tom Burns.
Paul Munsen is president of Sun Ovens International,
an Illinois-based company that manufactures solar ovens
for use in 126 countries, from Haiti to Ghana, Afghanistan
to Sri Lanka, North America to North Korea. He has
had to take out a mortgage on his own home to keep the
business going, but could never abandon ship now. 2
billion families on the planet depend on wood, charcoal
and other fuels to cook their food. According to Population
Action International, nearly one in three people live
in countries considered to have critically low levels
of forest cover. Each minute, there are 200 more people
on the planet and 50 acres less forest. Paul says, "By
harnessing the sun's rays, our ovens offer a free, reliable,
nonpolluting energy source."
MY HERO caught up to Mr. Munsen as he was preparing
a large shipment of ovens to be sent to many of the
destroyed villages in the tsunami devastated areas of
Sri Lanka.
So, how does a solar oven work?
According to Mr. Munsen, "The short rays of the
sun shine into the box (solar oven), and they convert
to long rays that can't escape. It heats up the box.
So, a solar oven is really just a very well insulated
box. The huge Villager Oven and the much smaller family
model (Global Sun Oven) work the same way. Sun ovens
operate on a very simple principle called the greenhouse
affect. Solar ovens can also be used to purify water
a
very big concern in a lot of refugee camps and parts
of Africa that do not have access to clean drinking
water. In developing countries we send a water pasteurizing
indicator
and it can tell when water has been pasteurized.
Water is pasteurized when it has been above 160 degrees
F for 6 minutes. That will kill all the bacteria. Boiling
is 212 degrees F
so one doesn't need to boil it.
And it's 4 times faster to pasteurize
so you save
on energy."
What is the wildest thing you have ever cooked in
a solar oven? Or heard of being cooked in one?
"One time to prove a point we cooked an entire
goat. It was for a fundraiser in Wisconsin by a farmer
that raised goats and was very involved in sending solar
ovens to Haiti. We cooked a goat and invited 750 people
to come and sample it. It took 2 1/2 hours in a large
villager oven. Accompanied by baked beans and bread
cooked in several global sun ovens. The ovens are used
in many different countries all over the world, so any
dish native to that country can be cooked."
How
does the food stay so moist and tender? Is it true food
won't burn?
"It stays moist and tender because there is no
movement of air and the entire chamber heats evenly.
The complex carbohydrate breaks down slowly, so there
is no drying and that allows the food to stay tender.
Reason it doesn't burn is that the entire chamber is
the same temperature
the food, pot and air around
the pot. The soup on a stove will scorch underneath
if you don't keep stirring because the heat is coming
from directly underneath."
Where do most of your ovens go? Who buys them?
"Most go into developing countries. Haiti has
the most followed by Ghana. Each of these countries
now has their own solar oven factories. In Ghana it's
mostly people that buy them. In Haiti it's different
relief agencies, development agencies, ngo's and fundraisers
like Slater's homeschooling group."
It seems like such a logical choice
solar ovens
in developing countries
no infrastructure is needed
anyone
can use one
so why the resistance?
"Primary resistance is more cultural than technical.
Women have cooked the same way for generations. Most
food in Africa is corn maize-based and the women will
tell you that the only way to cook it is to stir often
and add water slowly. Once you start cooking with a
solar oven, you can't open it. Convincing them to change
is the major challenge. In the west we overcome that
by using recipes. Even though it's much easier to put
everything in the pot and come back when done, it's
hard to change generations of passed down protocol."
How does using solar ovens help with the environment?
With sustainability?
"When a solar oven is used in a developing country
it has a huge impact on the environment. One of the
large Villager Ovens, when used to replace a wood fire
bakery, saves 150 tons of wood a year
which equals
277 tons of CO2 emissions
greenhouse gases. In
Africa, on a household level, each person uses about
a 1/2 a metric ton of wood a year for cooking and the
smaller global oven is able to replace approximately
70% of that. When a family of 8 uses a global sun oven,
over 4 tons of wood a year is saved. And 5.2 tons of
emissions a year are not released into the atmosphere.
As far as sustainablity
The sun is always there
but the availability of fuels is not always there and
consistent. The ovens are designed to be maintenance
free for 20 years. Leaving the trees standing has a
tremendous effect on oxygen which reflects on rainfall.
Ethiopia used to be a tropical paradise and now much
of the rain forest has become desert and there are major
droughts. The whole cycle shifts when so many trees
are cut down. When a woman cooks over an open fire it's
like smoking 2-3 packs a day. Often the women cook with
their babies strapped around them, so the babies breathe
that same smoke. Infectious lung disease is the 2nd
highest rate of disease, after AIDS, and eyesight is
also being affected at an alarming rate."
In
this day and age more and more people realize it would
be a good idea to scale back our dependency on foreign
oil. So why is it so hard to make the leap to solar
and wind power?
"I think the main reason is awareness. When people
become aware of it they gravitate towards it. The benefits
of saving energy with solar cooking are very high in
the summer months when air conditioning has to be turned
on, especially when using your oven. Most people don't
even know the concept exists. The problem with solar
and wind is that there is a longer time to get a payback,
but once it's paid back there are no more costs to the
consumer."
You have seen some pretty devastating sights of
human suffering and hunger. How do you keep going?
"Well, I guess in some ways when you see you can
make a difference it keeps you going. Helping one person
at a time accomplishes something. A lot of times it
is so frustrating you want to look away. Now, because
of inflation, the price of charcoal has gone up so much
in Haiti that it's becoming very hard to also buy fuel.
People who were cooking with propane are now going back
to wood. Each day they have to make a decision between
food and buying the fuel to cook it. We are trying to
make new ways to help people pay for the ovens."
Have you thought about approaching the Department of
Education or the Environment and pairing schools in
the US with schools in other countrie, so that the schools
in the US could adopt a school, say in Sri Lanka or
Haiti, and raise money to send the ovens to them?
"We have done that to a small degree with people
like Rowena Gerber and through the iEARN program, your
homeschoolers and the Sunday School programs. I'll be
going to Sri Lanka this fall and there is a Rotary program
that is sending a lot of ovens over there."
What gives you joy?
"The single biggest thing that gives me joy is
my relationship with God through Jesus Christ. Also,
everytime I see a shipment of Solar Ovens leave here
I get excited."
What makes you laugh?
"A lot of things. I'm generally a happy person."
How can kids get involved with your vision?
"There are many ways. We have one program, for
example in Angola, where children, groups of Sunday
School classes, can adopt a mother. It's called Share
Circle. With this program, a single mother is adopted
and they then are able to receive a solar oven. It takes
about 6 months and the sponsoring group gets a picture
and follow-up info about the mother and her family."
Paul Munsen continues to share his Sun Oven vision
with the world. He addressed the United Nations
on the environmental impact of using solar ovens and
worked with the U.S. Department of Commerce to find
a Haitian Partner to manufacture and market the solar
ovens in that country. Along with Teacher Hero Rowena
Gerber and her students, he baked for the World Food
Program on top of their building in Washington, D.C.
He cooked for and broke bread with Nelson Mandela in
South Africa. But what really keeps him going, are the
millions of women and children all over the world that
can have better, healthier lives with the help of a
solar oven. Such a simple solution to such a large problem.
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