-
SNC Scandic Coin:受監管的實物資產項目於 BingX、BitMart、L-Bank 及 Biconomy 正式上線
-
Rosenqvist takes $4.34 mln from record $30 mln Indy 500 purse
-
Valiant Monfils loses in first round on Roland Garros farewell
-
SNC 스칸딕 코인: 규제 준수 실물 자산 프로젝트, BingX, BitMart, L-Bank 및 Biconomy에 상장
-
FIFA reveals 48 World Cup team base training sites
-
SNC স্ক্যান্ডিক কয়েন: নিয়ন্ত্রিত বাস্তব-জগৎ সম্পদ প্রকল্প BingX, BitMart, L-Bank এবং Biconomy-এ চালু
-
Paderborn strike late to relegate Wolfsburg from Bundesliga
-
SNC Scandic Coin: Regulated real‑world‑asset project launched on BingX, BitMart, L‑Bank and Biconomy
-
Guardiola saluted by Michael Jordan at Man City farewell party
-
Canada PM compares 'dangerous' Alberta separatist bid to Brexit
-
Israel strikes southern Lebanon as far-right ministers call for escalation
-
Bolivian leader to slash own salary by 50% in gesture to protesters
-
Man Utd's Fernandes hits back at Keane over 'lie'
-
Lille part ways with coach Genesio
-
Leftist icon, millionaire lawyer, conservative senator: Who will be Colombia's next leader?
-
California chemical tank explosion threat 'eliminated,' official says
-
AC Milan sack coach Allegri after 'unequivocal' Champions League failure
-
'So much love': Wawrinka bids adieu to Roland Garros
-
AC Milan sack coach Allegri after Champions League failure
-
Brazil's Lula starts radiotherapy after removal of skin lesion
-
WHO urges DRCongo's neighbours to act immediately on Ebola risk
-
Migrants step up to support community in war-hit Beirut
-
De Zerbi 'passion' saved Spurs from relegation says Maddison
-
Heat dome over Europe scorches UK, France, Spain
-
Chelsea's poor discipline is a 'problem': McFarlane
-
Oil drops below $100 on hopes of US-Iran deal to open Hormuz
-
Philippines ends rescue operation for 12 missing in building collapse
-
Dupont, Capuozzo returns hand Toulouse Top 14 run-in boost
-
Russia threatens more strikes on Kyiv, urges foreigners to leave city
-
Trump links normalizing ties with Israel to Iran peace deal
-
Swiatek, Rybakina cruise through Roland Garros openers
-
Wawrinka bids adieu to Roland Garros with first-round loss
-
Colombia vote tests leftist rule as violence surges
-
Trump demands widespread sign-up to Abraham Accords as part of Iran peace deal
-
S.Africa government holds urgent talks over anti-migrant tensions
-
Pilgrims kick off hajj as Mideast peace deal hangs in the balance
-
Locals at epicentre of DR Congo Ebola outbreak storm hospital
-
Taj Mahal, Village People and elephants: Rubio's India excursion
-
Cambodia's Hun Sen pardons detained opposition leader
-
Iran and Trump talk down hopes of imminent peace deal
-
Yamal headlines Spain World Cup squad, Merino recalled
-
South Africa's Kolbe returns to Stormers from Japan
-
Swiatek races into French Open second round
-
Yamal leads Spain World Cup squad, Merino recalled
-
Oil plunges below $100 on hopes of US-Iran Hormuz deal
-
Pope urges 'disarming' of AI in major manifesto
-
Giro leader Vingegaard eyes remaining career goals
-
Pope urges 'disarming' of artificial intelligence in major manifesto
-
Iran warns deal with US not yet close, despite some progress
-
UK set to break record for hottest May day
Biogas helps cut bills, deforestation in east DR Congo
Julienne Mukelenge no longer worries about toxic fumes or power cuts when cooking at her home in Goma, in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, after switching to biogas, a renewable energy source that is cheaper and locally produced.
"Electricity is expensive, but with biogas it's very economical," she said, standing in her kitchen, where blue flames licked the sides of a bubbling pot of that night's supper.
Most of the city's nearly one million people cannot afford to use electricity and mostly depend on charcoal, called makala, for cooking and heating.
But the cost of a bag of charcoal has shot up after Goma, a strategic regional capital in the east, fell to the M23 armed group in January last year after fierce fighting with government forces.
The Rwanda-backed M23 was long dormant, but took up arms again in late 2021, capturing swathes of eastern DRC and sparking a mass displacement of people.
After seizing control of Goma, the M23 banned logging in Virunga National Park near the city on the grounds it helped fund pro-Kinshasa militias, leading to the rise in the price of charcoal.
"Before, I used to buy one bag of charcoal for a month," said mother of two Romaine Kanyere.
But with "the rise in the price of a sack of charcoal, gas is less expensive here", she added.
A six-kilogramme (13-pound) cylinder of biogas, costing $8, covers the needs of a household of three to five people for nearly two weeks, compared to $30 a month for charcoal.
- Eco-friendly fertiliser -
Biogas is produced by the decomposition of organic matter.
It has been made in Goma since 2016 by Umoja, a local company whose stated aim is to offer an alternative to firewood, which destroys forests.
Yves Rubarura, an Umoja employee wearing overalls and safety goggles, collects "30 cartloads" of droppings every week from chicken coops belonging to the company and local partners to fill the biogas digesters.
These are cement pits where the waste is converted into methane before being bottled.
He said Umoja had constructed around 50 biogas digesters, which are easy to build and operate, in the region.
The firm says it distributes 720 kilogrammes of biogas to its customers every month.
Production remains small-scale and limited for the time being.
In Goma, residents lack the space and resources to install their own biogas digesters, said Umoja director Victor Materanya.
Storage is also an issue, given the lack of suitable equipment to pressurise the bottles.
He nevertheless hopes to roll out the technology in rural areas, where farmers who supply the compost can then recover the fertiliser produced at the end of the anaerobic digestion process.
Serge Bashonga, an environmentalist in Goma, said producing this type of natural fertiliser can reduce the use of chemical fertilisers and the environmental damage they cause.
Biogas also helps to reduce the "toxic fumes from waste incineration" that pollute the air in the city and affect the daily lives of its inhabitants, he said.
B.Torres--AT