传感器显示,印度农村地区长期不采用购买的改良炉灶,而调查完全没有发现这一点

Q1 Economics, Econometrics and Finance
Samantha Hing , Ashok Gadgil
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引用次数: 1

摘要

仅凭用户调查并不能准确衡量实地改进炉灶的实际使用情况。我们介绍了在印度马哈拉施特拉邦农村进行的两项监测研究中,比较调查报告和传感器记录的烹饪事件或使用时间的结果。首先是对159个家庭免费试用伯克利印度炉(BIS),我们对这些家庭的炉灶使用情况进行了平均10天的监测(SD = 4.5)(称为“免费试用研究”)。在第二项研究中,我们监测了91个家庭在以约为家庭月收入三分之一的补贴价格购买BIS后平均468天(SD = 153)的使用情况(称为“购买后研究”)。这些研究从2019年2月持续到2021年3月。我们发现34%的家庭(n = 88)在免费试用研究中过度报告了BIS的使用情况,46%和28%的家庭在购买后研究的第一次(n = 75)和第二次(n = 69)调查中分别过度报告了BIS的使用情况。当以二元问题的形式询问家庭使用情况时,两项研究中的平均过度报告都减少了,但这种方法提供的粒度较小。值得注意的是,在购买后的研究中,传感器显示,大多数家庭都不采用炉灶,即使他们是用自己的钱购买的。调查没有发现炉灶使用的长期下降趋势。事实上,调查表明,在研究期间,炉灶的采用没有改变。家庭倾向于报告象征性的使用反应,如每周0,7或14次烹饪事件(对应于每天0,1或2次),这表明很难回忆起一周中确切的使用天数。此外,我们发现,在没有传感器数据支持的情况下,调查也可能对用户报告的炉灶效益提供误导性的定性结果,导致我们高估了影响。一些没有传感器记录使用的家庭报告说,炉灶燃料节省,做饭快,烟雾少。这些发现表明,调查可能不可靠或不足以为在实际实施中根据炉子减少对健康损害或减少排放的能力提供补贴提供坚实的基础数据。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Sensors show long-term dis-adoption of purchased improved cookstoves in rural India, while surveys miss it entirely

User surveys alone do not accurately measure the actual use of improved cookstoves in the field. We present the results of comparing survey-reported and sensor-recorded cooking events, or durations of use, of improved cookstoves in two monitoring studies, in rural Maharashtra, India. The first was a free trial of the Berkeley-India Stove (BIS) provided to 159 households where we monitored cookstove usage for an average of 10 days (SD = 4.5) (termed “free-trial study”). In the second study, we monitored 91 households' usage of the BIS for an average of 468 days (SD = 153) after they purchased it at a subsidized price of about one third of the households' monthly income (termed “post-purchase study”). The studies lasted from February 2019 to March 2021. We found that 34% of households (n = 88) over-reported BIS usage in the free-trial study and 46% and 28% of households over-reported BIS usage in the first (n = 75) and second (n = 69) surveys of the post-purchase study, respectively. The average over-reporting in both studies decreased when households were asked about their usage in a binary question format, but this method provided less granularity. Notably, in the post-purchase study, sensors showed that most households dis-adopted the cookstove even though they purchased it with their own money. Surveys failed to detect the long-term declining trend in cookstove usage. In fact, surveys indicated that cookstoves’ adoption remained unchanged during the study. Households tended to report nominal responses for use such as 0, 7, or 14 cooking events per week (corresponding to 0, 1, or 2 times per day), indicating the difficulty of recalling exact days of use in a week. Additionally, we found that surveys may also provide misleading qualitative findings on user-reported cookstove benefits without the support of sensor data, causing us to overestimate impact. Some households with zero sensor-recorded usage reported cookstove fuel savings, quick cooking, and less smoke. These findings suggest that surveys may be unreliable or insufficient to provide solid foundational data for subsidies based on the ability of a stove to reduce damage to health or reduce emissions in real-world implementations.

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来源期刊
Development Engineering
Development Engineering Economics, Econometrics and Finance-Economics, Econometrics and Finance (all)
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
11
审稿时长
31 weeks
期刊介绍: Development Engineering: The Journal of Engineering in Economic Development (Dev Eng) is an open access, interdisciplinary journal applying engineering and economic research to the problems of poverty. Published studies must present novel research motivated by a specific global development problem. The journal serves as a bridge between engineers, economists, and other scientists involved in research on human, social, and economic development. Specific topics include: • Engineering research in response to unique constraints imposed by poverty. • Assessment of pro-poor technology solutions, including field performance, consumer adoption, and end-user impacts. • Novel technologies or tools for measuring behavioral, economic, and social outcomes in low-resource settings. • Hypothesis-generating research that explores technology markets and the role of innovation in economic development. • Lessons from the field, especially null results from field trials and technical failure analyses. • Rigorous analysis of existing development "solutions" through an engineering or economic lens. Although the journal focuses on quantitative, scientific approaches, it is intended to be suitable for a wider audience of development practitioners and policy makers, with evidence that can be used to improve decision-making. It also will be useful for engineering and applied economics faculty who conduct research or teach in "technology for development."
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