The Role of Liquefied Petroleum Gas in Reducing Energy Poverty
Increasing household use of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) is one of several pathways to meet the goal of universal access to clean cooking and heating solutions by 2030, as stated in the United Nations' Sustainable Energy for All Initiative. T...
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Format: | Energy Study |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2014
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2011/12/15931923/role-liquefied-petroleum-gas-reducing-energy-poverty http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18293 |
Summary: | Increasing household use of liquefied
petroleum gas (LPG) is one of several pathways to meet the
goal of universal access to clean cooking and heating
solutions by 2030, as stated in the United Nations'
Sustainable Energy for All Initiative. This study examined
factors affecting household use of LPG, the state of LPG
markets in developing countries, and measures to enable more
households to shift away from solid fuels to LPG. The study
is based on three separate but complementary analyses of
factors affecting LPG use in developing countries: (1)
econometric analysis of national household expenditure
surveys in 10 developing countries that assessed the factors
influencing LPG selection and consumption; (2) examination
of LPG markets in 20 developing countries, including their
regulatory frameworks, pricing and other policies, supply
infrastructure, cylinder management, amount of information
available to the public, and activities designed to promote
household use of LPG; and (3) data from households in 110
developing countries about energy choices related to
cooking, with information on energy choice by wealth
quintile available in 63 of them. |
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