For the past 40 years, the dominant ‘policy’ on cooking energy in the Global South has been to improve the combustion efficiency of biomass fuels. This was said to alleviate the burdens of biomass cooking for three billion people by mitigating emissions, reducing deforestation, alleviating expenditure and collection times on fuels and increasing health outcomes. By 2015, international agencies were openly saying it was a failing policy. The dispersal of improved cookstoves was not keeping up with population growth, increasing urbanisation was leading to denser emissions and evidence suggested health effects of improved stoves were not as expected. A call was made for a new strategy, something other than ‘business as usual’. Conventional wis...
This study explores user experiences with improved cookstoves, drawing on findings from household su...
Eradicating poverty and achieving food and nutrition security in a sustainable environment is diffic...
Presented at GLOBELICS 2009, 7th International Conference, 6-8 October, Dakar, Senegal.Parallel sess...
Whilst the rapid spread of solar photovoltaics (PV) across Africa has already transformed millions o...
Globally 2.6 billion people, representing around 38% of the total population, depend on solid bioma...
This paper seeks to highlight the emerging opportunity for manufacturers to enter the largely untapp...
This paper is a review of research undertaken, and subsequent policy change enacted, in the years 20...
Access to energy is vital in addressing many of the current global sustainable development adversiti...
Energy for cooking is considered essential in achieving modern energy access. Despite this, almost t...
This paper aims to identify and understand the challenges that may confront the scaling up of a prop...
Globally, approximately 2 billion people have access to some form of electricity but do not have acc...
As of 2014, 81% of sub-Saharan population or 792 million people rely on the traditional use of bioma...
Although 40% of the global population relies on traditional biomass use, mainly firewood and charcoa...
Nearly 1 billion people across the globe do not have access to electricity in their homes and critic...
Slow progress in expanding clean cooking access is hindering progress on health, gender, equity, cli...
This study explores user experiences with improved cookstoves, drawing on findings from household su...
Eradicating poverty and achieving food and nutrition security in a sustainable environment is diffic...
Presented at GLOBELICS 2009, 7th International Conference, 6-8 October, Dakar, Senegal.Parallel sess...
Whilst the rapid spread of solar photovoltaics (PV) across Africa has already transformed millions o...
Globally 2.6 billion people, representing around 38% of the total population, depend on solid bioma...
This paper seeks to highlight the emerging opportunity for manufacturers to enter the largely untapp...
This paper is a review of research undertaken, and subsequent policy change enacted, in the years 20...
Access to energy is vital in addressing many of the current global sustainable development adversiti...
Energy for cooking is considered essential in achieving modern energy access. Despite this, almost t...
This paper aims to identify and understand the challenges that may confront the scaling up of a prop...
Globally, approximately 2 billion people have access to some form of electricity but do not have acc...
As of 2014, 81% of sub-Saharan population or 792 million people rely on the traditional use of bioma...
Although 40% of the global population relies on traditional biomass use, mainly firewood and charcoa...
Nearly 1 billion people across the globe do not have access to electricity in their homes and critic...
Slow progress in expanding clean cooking access is hindering progress on health, gender, equity, cli...
This study explores user experiences with improved cookstoves, drawing on findings from household su...
Eradicating poverty and achieving food and nutrition security in a sustainable environment is diffic...
Presented at GLOBELICS 2009, 7th International Conference, 6-8 October, Dakar, Senegal.Parallel sess...