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Indian villager, Pushpaben Kapadia (L) is shown a new 'Clean Cooking Stove' by members of The Self Employed Women's Association (SEWA) as she prepares food on a traditional stove made of mud at her residence in the village of Keiyal, some 50 Kms. from Ahmedabad on November 29, 2012. For hundreds of millions of Indian women, cooking the family meal is a daily, dangerous chore. Sweating over smoky open stoves they put their lives and their children at risk every day. But some are benefiting from a scheme providing cleaner, more efficient stoves. Its part of a global initiative backed by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to provide 100 million clean cookstoves to the homes of those who need them -- an estimated three billion people or 40 percent of the world's population. AFP PHOTO/Sam PANTHAKY (Photo credit should read SAM PANTHAKY/AFP/Getty Images)

Indian villager, Pushpaben Kapadia (L) is shown a new 'Clean Cooking Stove' by members of The Self Employed Women's Association (SEWA) as she prepares food on a traditional stove made of mud at her residence in the village of Keiyal, some 50 Kms. from  Ahmedabad on November 29, 2012.   For hundreds of millions of Indian women, cooking the family meal is a daily, dangerous chore. Sweating over smoky open stoves they put their lives and their children at risk every day. But some are benefiting from a scheme providing cleaner, more efficient stoves. Its part of a global initiative backed by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to provide 100 million clean cookstoves to the homes of those who need them -- an estimated three billion people or 40 percent of the world's population.   AFP PHOTO/Sam PANTHAKY        (Photo credit should read SAM PANTHAKY/AFP/Getty Images)