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Innovative Biomass Cooking Approaches for sub-Saharan Africa

Njenga, Mary ; K Gitau, James ; Iiyama, Miyuki ; Jamnadassa, Ramni ; Mahmoud, Yahia LU and Karanja, Nancy (2019) In African Journal of Food, Agriculture, Nutrition and Development 19(1). p.14066-14087
Abstract
Eradicating poverty and achieving food and nutrition security in a sustainable environment is difficult to achieve without adequate access to affordable cooking fuel. It is therefore important to understand the common sources of cooking energy used by people in rural areas and the challenges faced in making fuel sources economically viable, socially acceptable and ecologically sustainable. In the sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) region, more than 90% of the population relies on firewood and charcoal (wood fuel, collectively) as a primary source of domestic energy. Wood fuel sustainability is challenged by unsustainable harvesting and inefficient methods of converting wood into energy. The use of inefficient cook stoves contributes to wood wastage... (More)
Eradicating poverty and achieving food and nutrition security in a sustainable environment is difficult to achieve without adequate access to affordable cooking fuel. It is therefore important to understand the common sources of cooking energy used by people in rural areas and the challenges faced in making fuel sources economically viable, socially acceptable and ecologically sustainable. In the sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) region, more than 90% of the population relies on firewood and charcoal (wood fuel, collectively) as a primary source of domestic energy. Wood fuel sustainability is challenged by unsustainable harvesting and inefficient methods of converting wood into energy. The use of inefficient cook stoves contributes to wood wastage and smoke exposure associated with severe illnesses. Households often abandon traditional nutritious diets that take a long time to cook, reduce the number of meals, and spend income on fuel at the expense of food costs. Innovations exist that have the potential to provide affordable and cleaner tree-based cooking fuel. Pruning trees on the farm as a fuel source brings firewood closer to women, lightens their workload, saves time and reduces income spent on cooking fuel. Using briquettes or gas cook stoves can reduce health risks associated with food preparation and reduce income spent on cooking fuel due to increased fuel efficiency. The development of these innovations indicates the need for a multi-disciplinary approach to increase awareness of the benefits of cooking fuel innovations, encourage further research on product quality enhancement and standardization, to understand cultural and behavioral issues influencing adoption, and integrate innovations into bioenergy policy frameworks. (Less)
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author
; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
agroforestry, firewood, fuel briquettes, gasifier cook stove, emissions, climate change
in
African Journal of Food, Agriculture, Nutrition and Development
volume
19
issue
1
pages
14066 - 14087
publisher
African Scholarly Science Communications Trust (ASSCAT)
external identifiers
  • scopus:85065098374
ISSN
1684-5358
DOI
10.18697/ajfand.84.BLFB1031
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
e3e42694-e7d6-4906-9c63-59cb1953649b
date added to LUP
2019-02-04 10:37:10
date last changed
2022-04-25 20:49:26
@article{e3e42694-e7d6-4906-9c63-59cb1953649b,
  abstract     = {{Eradicating poverty and achieving food and nutrition security in a sustainable environment is difficult to achieve without adequate access to affordable cooking fuel. It is therefore important to understand the common sources of cooking energy used by people in rural areas and the challenges faced in making fuel sources economically viable, socially acceptable and ecologically sustainable. In the sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) region, more than 90% of the population relies on firewood and charcoal (wood fuel, collectively) as a primary source of domestic energy. Wood fuel sustainability is challenged by unsustainable harvesting and inefficient methods of converting wood into energy. The use of inefficient cook stoves contributes to wood wastage and smoke exposure associated with severe illnesses. Households often abandon traditional nutritious diets that take a long time to cook, reduce the number of meals, and spend income on fuel at the expense of food costs. Innovations exist that have the potential to provide affordable and cleaner tree-based cooking fuel. Pruning trees on the farm as a fuel source brings firewood closer to women, lightens their workload, saves time and reduces income spent on cooking fuel. Using briquettes or gas cook stoves can reduce health risks associated with food preparation and reduce income spent on cooking fuel due to increased fuel efficiency. The development of these innovations indicates the need for a multi-disciplinary approach to increase awareness of the benefits of cooking fuel innovations, encourage further research on product quality enhancement and standardization, to understand cultural and behavioral issues influencing adoption, and integrate innovations into bioenergy policy frameworks.}},
  author       = {{Njenga, Mary and K Gitau, James and Iiyama, Miyuki and Jamnadassa, Ramni and Mahmoud, Yahia and Karanja, Nancy}},
  issn         = {{1684-5358}},
  keywords     = {{agroforestry; firewood; fuel briquettes; gasifier cook stove; emissions; climate change}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  pages        = {{14066--14087}},
  publisher    = {{African Scholarly Science Communications Trust (ASSCAT)}},
  series       = {{African Journal of Food, Agriculture, Nutrition and Development}},
  title        = {{Innovative Biomass Cooking Approaches for sub-Saharan Africa}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.18697/ajfand.84.BLFB1031}},
  doi          = {{10.18697/ajfand.84.BLFB1031}},
  volume       = {{19}},
  year         = {{2019}},
}