Characterizing Sustained Use of Cleaner Cooking Fuel in Rural Poor Households of South India
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Research Gap
1.2. Study Objectives
2. Methods
2.1. Operationalization of Variables
2.1.1. Outcome Variable
2.1.2. Predictors
- Refill cost: Recent literature indicates that LPG refill cost impacts the extent of LPG use in rural poor households of India. Households that could afford higher refills might be more likely to use LPG, other factors remaining constant. We collected data on average refill cost from each sample household at the baseline, midline, and endline.
- Fuel contributing to less choking: We explored the perception of women (primary respondent) on LPG relative to traditional biomass use in terms of which fuel, they felt, contributes to less choking during cooking.
- Fuel releasing less smoke: We explored the perception of women (primary respondent) on LPG relative to traditional biomass use in terms of which fuel, they felt, releases less smoke during cooking.
- Fuel helping in faster cooking: We explored the perception of women (primary respondent) on LPG relative to traditional biomass use in terms of which fuel, they felt, helped in faster cooking of food.
- LPG refill tank transportation: A filled LPG tank weighs approximately 29.5 KGs (65 pounds). Transportation of such heavy LPG tanks could be an essential accessibility factor determining consistent use. We explored the LPG tank delivery logistics to sample households with three options: (1) delivered to households by the LPG distribution agency; (2) self-delivery arranged by households in owned vehicle; and (3) self-delivery arranged by households in a hired vehicle.
2.1.3. Control Variables
2.2. Data Analyses
3. Results
4. Discussion
4.1. Research Objective 1: Stacking
4.2. Research Objective 2: Correlates of Proportion of LPG Use
4.3. Implications for Future Research, Strategies, and Policy
- Using technologies like SUMS provides accurate evidence on stove usage in the wake of significant investment in clean cooking policies. Improvement in user-behavior knowledge by deploying SUMS provides granularity in uncovering the efficacy of clean cooking social policies and programs. Social workers and policy makers should continue engaging with technologists to deepen their efforts to design and develop human-centered technology applications to improve understanding of the behavior of energy-poor communities in resource-constrained areas.
- The study uncovers that attitudes and perceptions of poor communities toward LPG, and by extension toward cleaner cooking systems, matter. The findings highlight the need for further research to engage in targeted community-based awareness and educational campaigns regarding the benefits of clean cooking. Cooking is both a highly culturized and a personal activity influenced by internal and external factors. Adequate understanding and routine application of the person-in-environment perspective makes the social and policy researchers uniquely positioned in challenges on clean cooking. They can better understand the individual, relational, and environmental (both natural and built) factors that could expedite or impede the extent of clean cooking use in poor communities.
- The study, though exploratory, provides a robust idea on the current usage levels of LPG and traditional stoves, and the significance of supporting infrastructure. The findings could be leveraged to inform policy makers to develop logistical support an infrastructure to ensure timely delivery of LPG tanks to these households.
- The study uncovers the importance of attitudes and perceptions on clean cooking in poor communities. This calls for the policy makers to further empathize on targeted awareness campaigns to promote the utility and benefits of clean cooking in these communities.
5. Limitations of the Manuscript
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Variable | Baseline | Midline (9 Months) | Endline (18 Months) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mean (SD) | % (n) | Mean (SD) | % (n) | Mean (SD) | % (n) | |
Proportion of LPG use | 0.46 (0.28) | 0.46 (0.28) | 0.41 (0.33) | |||
Refill cost (INR) | 612.76 (89.38) | 749.5 (85.62) | 798.04 (58.82) | |||
Fuel results in less choking | ||||||
LPG | 100.00 (62) | 70.00 (42) | 98.28 (57) | |||
Biomass | 0.00 (0) | 30.00 (18) | 1.72 (1) | |||
Fuel emits less smoke | ||||||
LPG | 96.67 (58) | 100.00 (57) | ||||
Biomass | 3.33 (2) | 0.00 (0) | ||||
Fuel results in faster cooking | ||||||
LPG | 98.39 (61) | 95 (57) | 96.55 (56) | |||
Biomass | 1.61 (1) | 5.00 (3) | 3.45 (2) | |||
Way LPG refill tank transportation | ||||||
LPG agency home delivery | 85.48 (53) | 96.67 (58) | 96.36 (53) | |||
Self-delivery in owned vehicle | 1.61 (1) | 0.00 (0) | 1.82 (1) | |||
Households arrange self-delivery | 12.90 (8) | 3.33 (20 | 1.82 (1) | |||
Monthly income (INR) | 1162.30 (1018.89) | |||||
Regularity of income during the past nine months | ||||||
Regular across all season | 3.28 (2) | 18.33 (11) | 0.00 (0) | |||
Fluctuated with each season | 96.72 (59) | 81.67 (49) | 100.00 (53) | |||
Caste of the respondent | ||||||
General | 25.81 (16) | |||||
OBC | 67.74 (42) | |||||
SC/ST | 4.84 (3) | |||||
Other religious minorities | 1.61 (1) |
Variables | Coefficient (SE) | 95% CI |
---|---|---|
Affordability | ||
Refill cost (INR) | 0.00 * (0.00) | [0.00, 0.00] |
Awareness | ||
Less choking (LPG is reference category) | −0.10 t (0.06) | [−0.23, 0.03] |
Less emissions (LPG is reference category) | −0.21 t (0.11) | [−0.43, 0.02] |
Faster cooking (LPG is reference category) | −0.12 ** (0.04) | [−0.21, −0.04] |
Accessibility | ||
Refill transportation (LPG agency home delivery and self-delivery in owned car combined are reference category) | 0.22 * (0.11) | [0.01, 0.43] |
Control variables | ||
Regularity of income (regular is reference category) | −0.17 t (0.10) | [−0.37, 0.04] |
Monthly income (INR) | 0.00 (0.00) | [−0.00, 0.00] |
Caste (general is reference category) | ||
OBC | −0.19 * (0.08) | [−0.35, −0.03] |
SC/ ST | −0.17 * (0.08) | [−0.32, −0.02] |
Other religious minorities | −0.12 (0.08) | [−0.28, 0.04] |
Intercept | 0.32 (0.24) | [−0.14, 0.78] |
ICC | 0.26 | |
N time-person | 91 | |
N respondents | 58 |
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Kumar, P.; Du, M.; Ma, M. Characterizing Sustained Use of Cleaner Cooking Fuel in Rural Poor Households of South India. Earth 2022, 3, 313-323. https://doi.org/10.3390/earth3010019
Kumar P, Du M, Ma M. Characterizing Sustained Use of Cleaner Cooking Fuel in Rural Poor Households of South India. Earth. 2022; 3(1):313-323. https://doi.org/10.3390/earth3010019
Chicago/Turabian StyleKumar, Praveen, Maritha Du, and Mingyue Ma. 2022. "Characterizing Sustained Use of Cleaner Cooking Fuel in Rural Poor Households of South India" Earth 3, no. 1: 313-323. https://doi.org/10.3390/earth3010019
APA StyleKumar, P., Du, M., & Ma, M. (2022). Characterizing Sustained Use of Cleaner Cooking Fuel in Rural Poor Households of South India. Earth, 3(1), 313-323. https://doi.org/10.3390/earth3010019