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The Ugandan government hopes to scale up cleaner cooking options to curb the health and climate damage caused by burning wood and charcoal. SEI and partners are working on a national clean cooking strategy toward achieving that goal.
2023–2025
People in Uganda, like in many sub-Saharan African countries, rely heavily on fuel wood and charcoal burned in traditional devices for cooking and heating. Burning these fuels causes pollution that can damage health and contribute to climate change. Moreover, when harvested unsustainably, wood fuel consumption causes forest degradation and other environmental damage.
To reduce these impacts, the government of Uganda hopes to scale up cleaner cooking options like liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), electric appliances, ethanol and biogas. SEI and our research partners, Berkeley Air Monitoring Group, the Centre for Integrated Research and Community Development Uganda (CIRCODU); and the Clean Cooking Alliance are working with Uganda’s Ministry of Energy and Mineral Development (MEMD) and Ministry of Water and Environment (MWE) to develop a National Integrated Clean Cooking Strategy (NICCS).
The project aims to produce the following outputs:
1) Synthesize existing policies, map stakeholders in the clean cooking sector and work with stakeholders to co-develop a National Clean Cooking Roadmap;
2) Develop a Monitoring, Reporting and Verification (MRV) framework to monitor progress toward achieving the objectives defined by the plan;
3) Estimate changes in emissions of climate-forcing and health-damaging pollutants that would result from the NICCS targets.
Project / The project will increase the capacity of NEMA and the Uganda Ministry of Water and Environment to understand the major sources of SLCPs in the country
2023 - 2024 / About Short lived climate pollutants
Journal article / A novel analysis shows the global climate and health benefits of switching biomass cookstoves in low- and middle-income countries to electricity and LPG.
Other publication / This report describes the methods used to develop the Repository, an analysis of the policies included in terms of policy type, desired outcomes and agencies.
21 June 2022 / About Climate policy, Household energy, Pollution and Short lived climate pollutants
Feature / SEI's Rob Bailis led research for a journal article featuring the first known analysis of the health and climate consequences of large-scale fuel transitions.
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