. "Ulrich \u00D6hler"@en . . "\u00D6hler enjoyed a long, successful career in industrial engineering and design before moving with his wife Lisel in 1974 to Botswana, where they served as development aides. \u00D6hler, believing that technical accomplishments would have no meaning if the earth was destroyed, sought to work for a better world environment. In Botswana, a Canadian teacher named Richard Carothers introduced solar energy applications to the \u00D6hlers. They tried promoting solar cooking in Botswana, but were met with skepticism from Botswanans who asked whether solar cookers were used in Switzerland. In 1980, the \u00D6hlers returned to Switzerland where they built their first solar cooker. By 1984, \u00D6hler had developed a design for a sturdy, effective box cooker that was adaptable to a variety of materials and common hand-crafting skills. He also founded a group that would eventually take its name from the initials of Ulrich and Lisel \u00D6hler. ULOG developed a variety of box cooker designs and a solar food dryer, and also promoted German SK-14 parabolic-type cookers and Scheffler Community Kitchens. ULOG members have spread thousands of solar cookers in many countries, including Argentina, Burkina Faso, Guinea, India, Indonesia, Kenya, Mali, and Sudan. The Cuisine Solaire website notes that \u201CULOG clone\u201D solar box cookers are sold over the Internet. ULOG members follow their founder\u2019s counsel to \u201Cpractice what you preach\u201D and endeavor to reduce their own ecological impacts in the world and to promote solar cooking in Switzerland. Over 10,000 solar cookers have been sold in Switzerland, making that nation one of the highest per capita users of solar cookers in the world, despite its distance from the equator. \u00D6hler was as much a great collaborator as a greater designer. Many of the people he inspired and has partnered with are among the leading names of today\u2019s solar cooker movement, such as Wolfgang Scheffler, Michael G\u00F6tz, and Christine Lippold. Organizations such as Globosol, Solare Bruecke, Solar Energy for West Africa, VER-Solaire and others are closely associated with ULOG and many others have felt its influence. Kawesa Mukasa of Uganda was a graduate student in Switzerland in the early 1990s when \u00D6hler introduced him to solar cooking. Mukasa now heads the Solar Connect Association, one of the leading solar cooker organizations in Africa. Jean-Claude Pulfer, once a prot\u00E9g\u00E9 of \u00D6hler, now works in Paraguay where he is a partner in one of the most successful solar cooker programs in South America. With so many people following in his footsteps, the impact of \u00D6hler's work will not only live on, it will grow far, far greater in years to come."@en . . . . "\u00D6hler enjoyed a long, successful career in industrial engineering and design before moving with his wife Lisel in 1974 to Botswana, where they served as development aides. \u00D6hler, believing that technical accomplishments would have no meaning if the earth was destroyed, sought to work for a better world environment. In Botswana, a Canadian teacher named Richard Carothers introduced solar energy applications to the \u00D6hlers. They tried promoting solar cooking in Botswana, but were met with skepticism from Botswanans who asked whether solar cookers were used in Switzerland."@en .