{"title":"坦桑尼亚受限的烹饪能源选择:为什么城市居民即使在可以获得清洁能源替代品的情况下仍坚持使用肮脏的能源?","authors":"S. Alananga","doi":"10.1108/ijesm-08-2023-0018","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\nPurpose\nThe purpose of this study is to examine households’ behavior towards dirty cooking energy utilisation in an environment where relatively higher accessibility to clean energy is noted. Although the low utilisation rate of clean energy can partly be attributed to utility gains anticipated in dirty energy mixes (DEMs) arising out of accessibility constraints, affordances and enablers, it is still unclear on the extend at which each of these contributes towards DEMs manifestation among the seemingly well-to-do households with higher levels of clean energy mixes (CEM) access. This study, therefore, hinges on scrutinising on this lower utilisation patterns despite a seemingly higher accessibility of CEMs, specifically liquified petroleum gases (LPG).\n\n\nDesign/methodology/approach\nThe study is based on a household’s survey that was carried out in 2018, reaching a sample of 393 households using questionnaires in four wards of the Kigamboni district in Tanzania. Subsequent analyses were descriptive as well as inferential based on binary logistic regression analysis where utilisation of DEMs was predicted for both the high and low social economic status (SES) households by incorporating accessibility constraints, affordances and enablers.\n\n\nFindings\nThe results show, first, if one assumes energy stacking is not an issue, as households become more constrained towards CEMs utilisation, they shift towards DEMs suggesting that the overall effect is a substitution, and second, the complementarity effect ultimately outweighs the substitution effect as households do not shift from DEMs to CEMs rather stack multiple energy. DEMs flourish in this case study area because those with high income are among those in the lowest SES, and some of those with the highest SES are from among the lowest income category, and all of them end up with more DEMs because shifting towards CEMs require income to complement SES.\n\n\nPractical implications\nPolicy-wise, removing hurdles in accessing CEMs such as LPG subsidy programme, gas stove provision to the poor, and enhanced LPG awareness will most likely benefits only those who do not stack energy in cooking while strategies targeting those at the lowest SES such as higher education attainment, empower women as a family decision maker, encourage co-occupancy to enlarge the household size and contain urban growth within certain perimeter will have a significant impact only if they raise both incomes and SES.\n\n\nOriginality/value\nDespite of the dominance of DEMs for cooking such as charcoal and firewood in Tanzania, CEMs such as LPG, have emerged as complements or alternatives in the household energy basket. The utilisation of such CEMs is, however, still very low despite the accessibility, cost, environmental and health advantages they offer. Accessibility is not the only factor fuelling CEMs; a complementarity must exist between SES and income for the positive transition towards CEMs to be realised.\n","PeriodicalId":505806,"journal":{"name":"International Journal of Energy Sector Management","volume":"15 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-01-08","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Constrained cooking energy choices in Tanzania: why urban dwellers cling on dirty even where clean energy alternatives are accessible?\",\"authors\":\"S. Alananga\",\"doi\":\"10.1108/ijesm-08-2023-0018\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"\\nPurpose\\nThe purpose of this study is to examine households’ behavior towards dirty cooking energy utilisation in an environment where relatively higher accessibility to clean energy is noted. Although the low utilisation rate of clean energy can partly be attributed to utility gains anticipated in dirty energy mixes (DEMs) arising out of accessibility constraints, affordances and enablers, it is still unclear on the extend at which each of these contributes towards DEMs manifestation among the seemingly well-to-do households with higher levels of clean energy mixes (CEM) access. This study, therefore, hinges on scrutinising on this lower utilisation patterns despite a seemingly higher accessibility of CEMs, specifically liquified petroleum gases (LPG).\\n\\n\\nDesign/methodology/approach\\nThe study is based on a household’s survey that was carried out in 2018, reaching a sample of 393 households using questionnaires in four wards of the Kigamboni district in Tanzania. Subsequent analyses were descriptive as well as inferential based on binary logistic regression analysis where utilisation of DEMs was predicted for both the high and low social economic status (SES) households by incorporating accessibility constraints, affordances and enablers.\\n\\n\\nFindings\\nThe results show, first, if one assumes energy stacking is not an issue, as households become more constrained towards CEMs utilisation, they shift towards DEMs suggesting that the overall effect is a substitution, and second, the complementarity effect ultimately outweighs the substitution effect as households do not shift from DEMs to CEMs rather stack multiple energy. DEMs flourish in this case study area because those with high income are among those in the lowest SES, and some of those with the highest SES are from among the lowest income category, and all of them end up with more DEMs because shifting towards CEMs require income to complement SES.\\n\\n\\nPractical implications\\nPolicy-wise, removing hurdles in accessing CEMs such as LPG subsidy programme, gas stove provision to the poor, and enhanced LPG awareness will most likely benefits only those who do not stack energy in cooking while strategies targeting those at the lowest SES such as higher education attainment, empower women as a family decision maker, encourage co-occupancy to enlarge the household size and contain urban growth within certain perimeter will have a significant impact only if they raise both incomes and SES.\\n\\n\\nOriginality/value\\nDespite of the dominance of DEMs for cooking such as charcoal and firewood in Tanzania, CEMs such as LPG, have emerged as complements or alternatives in the household energy basket. The utilisation of such CEMs is, however, still very low despite the accessibility, cost, environmental and health advantages they offer. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
本研究的目的是在清洁能源可获得性相对较高的环境中,考察家庭使用脏污烹饪能源的行为。虽然清洁能源利用率低的部分原因可能是由于可获得性限制、负担能力和推动因素导致的脏污能源组合(DEMs)中预期的效用收益,但目前仍不清楚这些因素对清洁能源组合(CEM)可获得性较高的看似富裕的家庭中的脏污能源组合(DEMs)的影响程度。因此,本研究的关键在于,尽管清洁能源组合(CEM),特别是液化石油气(LPG)的可获得性似乎较高,但利用率却较低,这就需要对这种利用率较低的模式进行仔细研究。随后的分析既是描述性的,也是基于二元逻辑回归分析的推论性分析,通过纳入可及性限制因素、负担能力和促进因素,预测社会经济地位(SES)高和低的家庭对 DEM 的使用情况。研究结果表明:首先,如果假设能源堆叠不是一个问题,那么随着家庭在使用 CEMs 方面受到的限制越来越多,他们就会转向 DEMs,这表明总体效果是替代效应;其次,互补效应最终会超过替代效应,因为家庭不会从 DEMs 转向 CEMs,而是会堆叠多种能源。DEM 在该案例研究地区蓬勃发展,因为高收入家庭属于社会经济地位最低的家庭,而部分社会经济地位最高的家庭属于收入最低的家庭,所有这些家庭最终都使用了更多的 DEM,因为转向 CEM 需要收入来补充社会经济地位。实际意义从政策角度看,消除获得 CEM 的障碍(如液化石油气补贴计划、向穷人提供燃气灶、提高液化石油气意识)很可能只会使那些在做饭时不使用能源的人受益,而针对社会经济地位最低者的策略(如提高教育程度、赋予妇女作为家庭决策者的权力、鼓励共同居住以扩大家庭规模、将城市增长控制在一定范围内)只有在同时提高收入和社会经济地位的情况下才会产生重大影响。独创性/价值尽管在坦桑尼亚,木炭和木柴等用于烹饪的 DEMs 占主导地位,但液化石油气等 CEMs 已成为家庭能源篮子中的补充或替代品。然而,尽管这些 CEMs 在可获得性、成本、环境和健康方面具有优势,但其使用率仍然很低。可获取性并不是促进使用 CEM 的唯一因素;要实现向 CEM 的积极转变,社会经济地位和收入之间必须存在互补性。
Constrained cooking energy choices in Tanzania: why urban dwellers cling on dirty even where clean energy alternatives are accessible?
Purpose
The purpose of this study is to examine households’ behavior towards dirty cooking energy utilisation in an environment where relatively higher accessibility to clean energy is noted. Although the low utilisation rate of clean energy can partly be attributed to utility gains anticipated in dirty energy mixes (DEMs) arising out of accessibility constraints, affordances and enablers, it is still unclear on the extend at which each of these contributes towards DEMs manifestation among the seemingly well-to-do households with higher levels of clean energy mixes (CEM) access. This study, therefore, hinges on scrutinising on this lower utilisation patterns despite a seemingly higher accessibility of CEMs, specifically liquified petroleum gases (LPG).
Design/methodology/approach
The study is based on a household’s survey that was carried out in 2018, reaching a sample of 393 households using questionnaires in four wards of the Kigamboni district in Tanzania. Subsequent analyses were descriptive as well as inferential based on binary logistic regression analysis where utilisation of DEMs was predicted for both the high and low social economic status (SES) households by incorporating accessibility constraints, affordances and enablers.
Findings
The results show, first, if one assumes energy stacking is not an issue, as households become more constrained towards CEMs utilisation, they shift towards DEMs suggesting that the overall effect is a substitution, and second, the complementarity effect ultimately outweighs the substitution effect as households do not shift from DEMs to CEMs rather stack multiple energy. DEMs flourish in this case study area because those with high income are among those in the lowest SES, and some of those with the highest SES are from among the lowest income category, and all of them end up with more DEMs because shifting towards CEMs require income to complement SES.
Practical implications
Policy-wise, removing hurdles in accessing CEMs such as LPG subsidy programme, gas stove provision to the poor, and enhanced LPG awareness will most likely benefits only those who do not stack energy in cooking while strategies targeting those at the lowest SES such as higher education attainment, empower women as a family decision maker, encourage co-occupancy to enlarge the household size and contain urban growth within certain perimeter will have a significant impact only if they raise both incomes and SES.
Originality/value
Despite of the dominance of DEMs for cooking such as charcoal and firewood in Tanzania, CEMs such as LPG, have emerged as complements or alternatives in the household energy basket. The utilisation of such CEMs is, however, still very low despite the accessibility, cost, environmental and health advantages they offer. Accessibility is not the only factor fuelling CEMs; a complementarity must exist between SES and income for the positive transition towards CEMs to be realised.