In Pakistan’s flood-hit south, women turn to zero-carbon cookstoves to curb emissions

Smoke rises as the woman villagers prepare lunch on a zero-carbon Stove inside a house in Ramzan Arain village of Mirpurkhas district in Sindh, Pakistan, on December 19, 2025. (Screengrab/AN)
Short Url
Updated 24 December 2025
Follow

In Pakistan’s flood-hit south, women turn to zero-carbon cookstoves to curb emissions

  • Pakistan faces frequent climate-induced rains and floods that killed more than 1,000 people and damaged vast swathes of crops this year
  • Karachi-based non-profit REPL has distributed 500 zero-carbon cookstoves in rural Sindh as part of efforts to hedge against future shocks

MIRPURKHAS: Surrounded by cauldrons, clay pots and utensils, Sonari Mitthoo sits on the floor of her mud house in the southern Pakistani district of Mirpurkhas as she prepares lunch for her family.

Thanks to her new zero-carbon stove, the 35-year-old mother of nine cooks food without choking on smoke and while adapting to climate change in Pakistan’s flood-hit Sindh province.

Karachi-based NGO Revive Environment Private Limited (REPL) distributed around 500 of these climate-friendly stoves in rural communities in Sindh this year, according to its senior manager operations Muhammad Ramzan.

Woman villagers in Mirpurkhas, Thatta, Umerkot and Sujawal districts have since been benefitting from these devices, which were given to them free of cost.

“This stove emits very little smoke while wood consumption is also nominal,” Mitthoo told Arab News, while cooking inside her house in Ramzan Arain village of Mirpurkhas.

“The other [traditional] stoves would make us cough because they used to emit a lot of smoke.”

These new stoves have been designed to ensure efficient air flow that improves combustion in the chamber, which in turn increases the temperature manifolds.

This extraordinary increase in temperature burns out small smoke particles. These climate-friendly stoves have a 4-inch opening to place pots and utensils above them, unlike wider hobs of traditional stoves that waste much of the heat, resulting in less smoke and faster cooking, according to Ramzan.

REPL plans to distribute around 2 million climate-friendly stoves over the next 5 years as Pakistan seeks global funding to hedge against future climate shocks, with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) dolling out a $200 million first tranche to the country under its $1.4 billion Resilience and Sustainability Facility (RSF) earlier this month.

Climate Action Accelerator (CAA), a Geneva-based not-for-profit entity working to contain global warming well below two degrees and to strengthen climate resilience, says access to clean cooking stoves and fuels reduces greenhouse gas emissions, creating positive health and wellbeing outcomes for people.

“This stove is good for us because it does not cause us any coughing and does not generate any coal,” Mitthoo said.

Pakistan is ranked among the world’s top climate-affected nations. Intense rains and floods this year killed more than 1,000 people and damaged crops and infrastructure worth billions of dollars in Pakistan’s Sindh, Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces. Deforestation and glacial melting are the two leading causes compounding the climate crisis in the country.

Pakistan lost nearly 8 percent of its tree cover from 2001 to 2024, according to Global Forest Watch, a forest monitoring digital platform.

At least 78 percent (6,870 hectares) of tree cover loss was due to logging, followed by wildfires at 12 percent (1,080 hectares), permanent agriculture (492 hectares), temporary disturbances like natural disasters (184 hectares) and new settlements and infrastructure (179 hectares).

“One big benefit of this stove is that it is fuel efficient and does not consume too much wood,” said Mitthoo who sees floods inundating her village almost every rainy season, killing people and animals and forcing her family to evacuate.
Hussan Bano, an official at the government-funded Sindh Rural Support Organization (SRSO), said REPL’s cookstove pilot project WAS helping reduce deforestation and environmental degradation in rural areas.

“This [new stove] has a specialty that it uses less wood, produces less smoke and saves time,” she told Arab News. “It also keeps the environment clean.”

Faisal Mustafa, an SRSO organizer in Mirpurkhas, said the smoke-free cookstoves were helping women save about 70 percent of firewood, thus indirectly reducing deforestation.

“These stoves emit lesser smoke and the women of our households who were burning 10 kilograms of wood are now burning only two to three kilograms,” he said.

“When the smoke is reduced, the production of greenhouse gases is reduced. When there is less greenhouse gases production, it is very good for our climate.”

REPL plans to scale up the distribution of these stoves to approximately 1 million in rural Sindh, followed by an additional one million across rural Punjab, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan, according to Ramzan.

The NGO is in the process of registering its cookstove project with international registry VERRA, a non-profit that operates standards in environmental and social markets, including the world’s leading Verified Carbon Standard crediting program.

The fresh distribution would commence after the completion of the registry process and fulfillment of all regulatory requirements.

“We aim to commence mass distribution by the third quarter of 2026,” Ramzan said, adding they intend to complete registration and fulfil regulatory requirements before that.


T20 World Cup: Pakistan’s India boycott splits fans as politics overshadows cricket

Updated 5 sec ago
Follow

T20 World Cup: Pakistan’s India boycott splits fans as politics overshadows cricket

  • The boycott has dealt a blow to the ICC’s marquee event, with India-Pakistan matches ‌the biggest drivers ‌of global viewership, revenue
  • On the streets, many Pakistani fans back the boycott as a response to what they see as India’s growing influence over cricket governance

KARACHI: Pakistan’s decision to boycott its Twenty20 World Cup match against India has drawn widespread support from fans ​and administrators who hailed the move as a long-overdue stand in a rivalry in which sport and geopolitics have collided.

The government on Sunday cleared Pakistan to take part in the tournament beginning February 7 but barred the team from playing India in a February 15 group match in Colombo, a decision the International Cricket Council (ICC) said was not in the interests of the global game.

The boycott deepened a long freeze in bilateral cricket between the nuclear-armed neighbors — who have not played a full series since 2012–13 and now meet largely at neutral venues — and dealt a blow to the ICC’s marquee event, with India-Pakistan matches ‌the biggest drivers ‌of global viewership and revenue.

’ENOUGH IS ENOUGH’

For many in Pakistan, however, ‌the ⁠boycott ​was less ‌about cricketing issues, with Pakistan forfeiting two points by skipping the match, and more about symbolism.

“Enough is enough,” former Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) chairman Najam Sethi told Reuters, accusing India’s board of politicizing the ICC. “It’s time to challenge this duplicitous approach by exercising PCB’s options in alliance with Bangladesh.”

The Indian government, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) and the International Cricket Council did not respond to requests for comment.

The ICC said it was still awaiting an official communication from the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) conveying their “position of selective participation.”

“While the ICC respects the roles ⁠of governments in matters of national policy, this decision is not in the interest of the global game or the welfare of fans ‌worldwide, including millions in Pakistan,” the Dubai-based body said in a ‍statement on Sunday.

The government has not publicly detailed ‍its reasoning, but Mosharraf Zaidi, a spokesperson for Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, linked the move to security ‍tensions with India.

“Nothing is more important than the memory of Pakistani citizens and troops murdered by Indian proxy terrorists over the weekend,” Zaidi said. “With funerals taking place today, this was the least that could be done.”

The remarks followed coordinated attacks by Baloch separatist militants across Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province over the weekend that killed nearly 50 people.

India’s ​foreign ministry rejected Pakistan’s accusations, calling them “baseless” and accusing Islamabad of deflecting attention from its own internal issues.

Pakistan’s World Cup jersey has been branded the “Markhor Edition,” after the national ⁠animal, a symbol of resilience also used in military iconography, Geo TV reported.

’LET CRICKET JUST BE A GAME’

On the streets of Pakistan’s major cities, many cricket fans backed the boycott as a response to what they see as India’s growing influence over global cricket governance.

“This arrogance of India should be broken a little,” said Mohammad Asghar, a fan in Karachi. “They should realize someone has come forward to challenge them.”

Others drew parallels with Bangladesh’s earlier withdrawal from the tournament over safety concerns, a move that led to Scotland replacing them, and questioned why Pakistan should be held to a different standard.

“If Bangladesh can boycott for one player’s safety, why can’t Pakistan take a stand?” said Ayaz Ahmed.

The decision also sparked heated debate on social media, with users divided between calls for “self-respect” and warnings that skipping the match could further isolate Pakistan in global cricket.

Former Pakistan captain Shahid Afridi agreed.

“Cricket ‌can open doors when politics closes them,” he wrote on X. “It’s regrettable that Pakistan won’t play India, but this is the moment for the ICC to prove it is impartial.”