Struggles from below

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Smart gas cooking seeks to break African cities' dirty charcoal habit

The widespread use of charcoal for cooking in African cities can cause devastating damage to forests up to 300 km away, scientist Sebastian Rodriguez-Sanchez found while working on energy and agriculture issues in West Africa. So in 2015, he co-founded a business to try to fix the problem by weaning people off charcoal - made by smouldering wood - and onto bottled gas, a fuel common in his home country of Mexico. PLACE