Knowledge fuels change - Support energypedia!
For over 10 years, energypedia has been connecting energy experts around the world — helping them share knowledge, learn from each other, and accelerate the global energy transition.
Today, we ask for your support to keep this platform free and accessible to all. Even a small contribution makes a big difference! If just 10–20% of our 60,000+ monthly visitors donated the equivalent of a cup of coffee — €5 — Energypedia would be fully funded for a whole year.
Is the knowledge you’ve gained through Energypedia this year worth €5 or more?
Your donation keeps the platform running, helps us create new knowledge products, and contributes directly to achieving SDG 7.


Donate now and support open access to energy expertise

Thank you for your support, your donation, big or small, truly matters!

Difference between revisions of "Publication - Cooking in the Margins: Exploring the Role of Liquefied Petroleum Gas for Refugees in Low-income Countries"

From energypedia
***** (***** | *****)
(Created page with "{{Pub Database |Pub Title=Cooking in the Margins: Exploring the Role of Liquefied Petroleum Gas for Refugees in Low-income Countries |Pub Organization=ScienceDirect |Pub Autho...")
 
***** (***** | *****)
 
Line 10: Line 10:
 
|Pub Tag Cooking=Cooking
 
|Pub Tag Cooking=Cooking
 
|Pub Tag Impact=Impacts
 
|Pub Tag Impact=Impacts
|Pub Tag Other=Other
+
|Pub Tag Humanitarian=Humanitarian Energy
 
}}
 
}}

Latest revision as of 15:47, 24 November 2021

►Add a New Publication
►See All Latest Publications

Title
Cooking in the Margins: Exploring the Role of Liquefied Petroleum Gas for Refugees in Low-income Countries
Publisher
ScienceDirect
Author
James Haselip, Kimball Chen, Hanaan Marwah & Elisa Puzzolo
Published in
October 2021
Abstract
Framed by the UN's 'Clean Energy Challenge', this article focuses on the role of Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) in delivering clean cooking solutions for refugees and host communities in resource-poor countries. Notwithstanding scepticism towards LPG among the majority of Western donors, the authors summarise evidence to indicate the latent market demand for LPG among refugees, as a cleaner, safer and lower-carbon technology option compared to the baseline scenario in most circumstances.
URL


Admin:
No

PIE Grant (Grid Portal)?