20 research outputs found
Just electrification: Imagining the justice dimensions of energy access and addressing energy poverty
Beyond technical smartness: Rethinking the development and implementation of sociotechnical smart grids in India
Estimating the spatially explicit wind generated electricity cost in Africa - A GIS based analysis
Outdoor cooking prevalence in developing countries and its implication for clean cooking policies
More than 3 billion people use wood fuels for their daily cooking needs, with detrimental health implications related to smoke emissions. Global initiatives to disseminate clean cooking stoves emphasize technologies that are either expensive, such as electricity and gasifier stoves, or for which supply chains hardly reach rural areas, such as LPG. This emphasis neglects that many households in the developing world cook outdoors. Our calculations demonstrate that for such households, already the use of less expensive biomass cooking stoves can substantially reduce smoke exposure. The costeffectiveness of clean cooking policies can thus be improved by taking cooking location and ventilation into account
