Difference between revisions of "Mapping Cooking Hotspots"

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*[[Energy Access Figures#Access to Clean Cooking Energy|Access to Clean Cooking Energy]]
 
*[[Energy Access Figures#Access to Clean Cooking Energy|Access to Clean Cooking Energy]]
 
*[http://reports.weforum.org/fostering-effective-energy-transition-2019/energy-transition-index/energy-transition-index-ranking/ Energy Transition Index]
 
*[http://reports.weforum.org/fostering-effective-energy-transition-2019/energy-transition-index/energy-transition-index-ranking/ Energy Transition Index]
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*Bailis, Drigo, Gilhardi & Masera (2015) [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/271503594_The_Carbon_Footprint_of_Traditional_Woodfuels Carbon Footprint of Tradiitional Fuels]
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Revision as of 00:51, 8 December 2019

Overview

With this article we want to map the cooking hot-spots (to be defined) where (i) firewood scarcity, (ii) (a)socio economic & (b) climate vulnerability and (iii) reliance on solid fuels overlap.

Possible Datasets

Firewood scarcity

tbc

Socio economic vulnerability

Data from United Nations Committee for Development Policy Secretariat. Triennial review dataset 2000 - 2018.

Climate vulnerability

Reliance on solid fuels


Idea: Creating a map to show the most vulnerable areas

to be developed; different layers of color coded areas based on a classification in the following categories:

Country/region firewood scarcity socio economic vulnerability possibly climate vulnerability solid fuels Scoring






References

  1. https://gain.nd.edu/our-work/country-index/rankings/
  2. The Germanwatch Global Climate Risk Index is an analysis based on one of the most reliable data sets available on the impacts of extreme weather events and associated socio-economic data.
  3. https://germanwatch.org/en/16046


Further Information