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Difference between revisions of "Publication - Cooking in Displacement Settings: Engaging the Private Sector in Non-wood-based Fuel Supply"

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{{Pub Database
 
{{Pub Database
 
|Pub Title=Cooking in Displacement Settings: Engaging the Private Sector in Non-wood-based Fuel Supply
 
|Pub Title=Cooking in Displacement Settings: Engaging the Private Sector in Non-wood-based Fuel Supply
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In many cases, host governments are recognizing the environmental damage and are now pushing for change, banning in-kind firewood distribution or requesting humanitarian agency support to transition refugees to alternative fuels. All these issues are present in the Kakuma refugee camp complex in Kenya, which prompted the Moving Energy Initiative (MEI) to explore alternative solutions to meeting residents’ cooking energy needs.
 
In many cases, host governments are recognizing the environmental damage and are now pushing for change, banning in-kind firewood distribution or requesting humanitarian agency support to transition refugees to alternative fuels. All these issues are present in the Kakuma refugee camp complex in Kenya, which prompted the Moving Energy Initiative (MEI) to explore alternative solutions to meeting residents’ cooking energy needs.
  
There is significant potential for private-sector engagement in this context – which, though
+
This paper presents the findings from that process, as well as background information on the cooking situation in Kakuma. It examines the challenges for refugees in accessing modern cooking solutions, and for those supporting or seeking to improve cooking practices among refugee populations and host communities. The paper is accompanied by a series of case studies that highlight examples of interventions taking place in other displacement contexts, to illustrate what can be learnt from such interventions and what additional support is needed to increase the uptake of alternatives to firewood and charcoal. This paper is based on work completed by the MEI in designing the non-wood cooking concession, as well as on interviews with a range of stakeholders in the sector. It aims to inform practitioners, policymakers and private-sector companies interested in better serving this market.
largely overlooked to date, could result in win-win scenarios for all stakeholders. Refugee camps
 
and other displacement settings present opportunities for private-sector cooking fuel companies
 
to expand their customer bases, with the added advantage for vendors of offering concentrated
 
demand and scope for economies of scale. Studies show that refugees are already engaging
 
with existing suppliers, using what little income they have to purchase traditional cooking
 
fuels (i.e. firewood and charcoal). On a global scale, however, private-sector investment in
 
the supply of alternative fuels to these markets has been limited to date.
 
|Pub Topics=Cooking, Mobility, Other, Improved Cookstoves
 
 
|Pub Download=https://www.chathamhouse.org/sites/default/files/publications/2019-01-22-PatelGross2.pdf
 
|Pub Download=https://www.chathamhouse.org/sites/default/files/publications/2019-01-22-PatelGross2.pdf
 
|Pub Newsletter=No
 
|Pub Newsletter=No
 +
|Pub Tag Humanitarian=Humanitarian Energy
 +
|Pub Topics=Cooking, Other, Improved Cookstoves
 
}}
 
}}
  
[[Category:Mobility]]
 
 
[[Category:Cooking]]
 
[[Category:Cooking]]
 
[[Category:Cookstoves]]
 
[[Category:Cookstoves]]
 
[[Category:Cooking_Fuels]]
 
[[Category:Cooking_Fuels]]

Latest revision as of 21:47, 21 July 2020

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Title
Cooking in Displacement Settings: Engaging the Private Sector in Non-wood-based Fuel Supply
Publisher
Moving Energy Initiative (MEI)
Author
Laura Patel & Katie Gross
Published in
January 2019
Abstract
Providing adequate cooking fuel and clean-burning, fuel-efficient stoves in displacement settings has long been a major challenge for local authorities, humanitarian agencies, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), local communities and refugees themselves. Refugees generally have limited access to modern cooking solutions. Most either depend on insufficient humanitarian agency handouts of ‘in-kind’ firewood or have to travel long distances to collect firewood (in the latter case, exposing themselves to the risk of attack and/or sparking conflict with host communities). In many displacement settings, such as in Tanzania and Bangladesh, a crisis point is being reached in which firewood from the local environment is no longer available and no alternatives exist.

In many cases, host governments are recognizing the environmental damage and are now pushing for change, banning in-kind firewood distribution or requesting humanitarian agency support to transition refugees to alternative fuels. All these issues are present in the Kakuma refugee camp complex in Kenya, which prompted the Moving Energy Initiative (MEI) to explore alternative solutions to meeting residents’ cooking energy needs.

This paper presents the findings from that process, as well as background information on the cooking situation in Kakuma. It examines the challenges for refugees in accessing modern cooking solutions, and for those supporting or seeking to improve cooking practices among refugee populations and host communities. The paper is accompanied by a series of case studies that highlight examples of interventions taking place in other displacement contexts, to illustrate what can be learnt from such interventions and what additional support is needed to increase the uptake of alternatives to firewood and charcoal. This paper is based on work completed by the MEI in designing the non-wood cooking concession, as well as on interviews with a range of stakeholders in the sector. It aims to inform practitioners, policymakers and private-sector companies interested in better serving this market.
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