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Citation

Jagger, Pamela & Perez-Heydrich, Carolina (2016). Land Use and Household Energy Dynamics in Malawi. Environmental Research Letters, 11(12), 125004. PMCID: PMC6178981

Abstract

Interventions to mitigate household air pollution (HAP) from cooking with solid fuels often fail to take into account the role of access to freely available wood fuels in determining fuel choice and willingness to adopt clean cooking technologies, key factors in mitigating the burden of HAP. We use national-scale remote sensing data on land use land cover change, and population representative data from two waves of the Malawi Living Standards Measurement Survey to explore the relationship between land use change and the type of fuel households use, time spent collecting fuel, and expenditures on fuel, hypothesizing that land use dynamics influence household-level choice of primary cooking fuel. We find considerable heterogeneity with respect to regeneration and deforestation/ degradation dynamics and evidence of spatial clustering. We find that regeneration of forests and woodlands increases the share of households that collect fuelwood, whereas deforestation and degradation lead households to purchase fuelwood. We also find that a relatively large share of land under woody savannah or degraded forest (versus fully stocked forest) increases fuel collection time. Areas with regeneration happening at broader scale experience increases in fuel expenditures. Our findings have implications for the spatial targeting of interventions designed to mitigate HAP.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/11/12/125004

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2016

Journal Title

Environmental Research Letters

Author(s)

Jagger, Pamela
Perez-Heydrich, Carolina

PMCID

PMC6178981

ORCiD

Jagger - 0000-0001-7148-432X