A social and environmental evaluation of fuel-efficient cook-stoves and conservation in Uganda

A significant factor contributing to deforestation is the expanding human populations' increasing demands on forests and forest products. In many areas, rural households rely solely on fuelwood collected from the forest for their domestic energy supply. Fuel-saving stoves, or improved cook-stov...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental conservation 1998-06, Vol.25 (2), p.99-108
Hauptverfasser: WALLMO, KRISTY, JACOBSON, SUSAN K.
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description A significant factor contributing to deforestation is the expanding human populations' increasing demands on forests and forest products. In many areas, rural households rely solely on fuelwood collected from the forest for their domestic energy supply. Fuel-saving stoves, or improved cook-stoves, have been introduced to reduce fuelwood consumption and thus alleviate deforestation, but there is frequently little or no formal monitoring and evaluation of programmes; their success as both a development and a resource-conservation tool is therefore undetermined. A programme was implemented in communities surrounding two national parks in western Uganda to compare domestic fuelwood consumption of an improved cook-stove and the traditional cooking fire, and assess the attitudes of stove users and non-users towards the improved stove and resource conservation. A kitchen performance test conducted in 100 households in Kiziba, Kahangi and Matayisa/Bundinyama parishes showed that fuelwood consumption did not differ significantly between improved and traditional stoves under actual field conditions. Household surveys showed that respondents in all three parishes had positive perceptions of the improved cook-stove. Perceived advantages of the improved stove included the ability to cook more than one item at once, fuelwood savings, quick cooking, and smoke/accident reduction. Many problems cited with the stove were technical, such as chimney malfunctions and pot-holes being too large or small to accommodate cooking pots. Cost of the stove was the primary reason for non-adoption. Improved-stove users were more concerned with forest conservation than were non-users. The need for monitoring and evaluation of improved-stove programmes is strongly indicated if they are to continue to be implemented as tools for resource conservation.
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source JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; Cambridge University Press Journals Complete
subjects Animal, plant and microbial ecology
Applied ecology
Biological and medical sciences
conservation
Conservation, protection and management of environment and wildlife
Cooking
deforestation
energy efficiency
Environmental conservation
evaluation
Food preparation
Forest conservation
Fuel consumption
fuelwood
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
General aspects
Kitchen stoves
National parks
Smoke curing
Stoves
Wildlife conservation
title A social and environmental evaluation of fuel-efficient cook-stoves and conservation in Uganda
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