By Ese Ahwotu with agency report
The Federal Executive Council (FEC), yesterday approved the purchase of N9.2billion worth of clean cook stoves and ‘wonder bags’ for rural women, under the National Clean Cooking Scheme.
Wonder bag is a non-electric slow cooker invented by a South African eco-entrepreneur, Sarah Collins, who came up with the idea six years’ ago, during a power cut, when she decided to keep her dinner cooking by surrounding the pan with cushions.
Supervising Minister of Information, Dr. Nuruddeen Muhammed; Minister of Environment, Mrs. Lawrecia Mallam and Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Senator Bala Mohammed, briefed State House correspondents at the end of the meeting, presided over by Vice-President Namadi Sambo.
Mohammed said the N9.2billion inclusive of Value Added Tax (VAT) was approved for the procurement of 750,000 units of the clean cook stoves and 18,000 ‘wonder bags’.
He said the stoves are expected to be delivered by Messrs Integra Renewable Energy Services Limited within a period of 12 weeks.
He noted that the stoves, which will be assembled locally, will provide jobs to Nigerians, among other benefits.
The minister said, “The National Clean Cooking Scheme is an aggressive drive to engender clean cooking culture amongst the poor rural women; to reduce and possibly eliminate cooking with solid fossil, which is detrimental to health.
“The scheme is expected to provide 20 million clean stoves over a five-year period, at the rate of four million stoves yearly, which will be distributed without charge.
“It will also reduce incessant felling of trees which exposes the country to ecological problems”.
The council also awarded a contract of N60.9 billion to an indigenous firm, KaKatar CE Limited, for the provision of engineering infrastructure for Kyami District, Zone C, Abuja.




