Kiros, Bahre
- Department of Economics, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
- Mekelle University
Research article2023Peer reviewedOpen access
Gebru, Bahre; Elofsson, Katarina
In this study, we investigate how households' choice of energy source is influenced by the status of the local forest resource. We assume that households choose between clean fuels (e.g., kerosene, LPG, solar, and elec-tricity), dirty biobased fuels (e.g., firewood, animal dung, crop residues, and charcoal), and mixed fuels. We integrate socioeconomic data with high-resolution satellite data on forest conditions from the Uganda National Panel Survey. The findings from a random-effects multinomial logit model indicate that households in vegetated areas are 6-7% less likely to rely solely on dirty biobased fuels, and 6-8% more likely to use mixed fuels, compared to those in non-vegetated areas. A larger forest stock is more strongly associated with lower use of firewood than charcoal. A possible explanation for the findings is the presence of policies for forest conservation and enhanced forest property rights, which improve forest conditions and limit opportunities to collect firewood. Given households' dependence on forest-based fuels, such policies could need to be modified to secure house-holds' access to these fuels.
Fuel choice; Forest status; Random-effects multinomial logit; Policy; Satellite data; Uganda
Energy Policy
2023, volume: 173, article number: 113390
Publisher: ELSEVIER SCI LTD
SDG7 Affordable and clean energy
SDG15 Life on land
Economics
Forest Science
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/121198