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Cooking fuel frequency use in urban Uganda: addressing household air pollution

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Abstract

This study examines the frequency use of cooking fuels by residents of four urban areas in Uganda (Kampala, Lira, Soroti, and M’bale). The specific objective is to identify urban dweller characteristics influencing the frequency of use of fuelwood, charcoal, kerosene, gas, or electricity in daily cooking. An ordered probit regression uses the survey data to estimate five relationships of cooking fuel use frequency generating measures of probability use in response to socio-demographic, income, and location characteristics. Charcoal and firewood remain the key cooking fuels and their use exposes families to excessive levels of toxic emissions. The probability of frequent firewood use increases among elderly, those with children or lower incomes, and residing outside Kampala. Frequency of cooking with charcoal decreases with higher age, having children, or residing in Kampala, but increases if married, with high income, or if college educated. The frequent use of liquid gas or electricity increases with income and among the college educated, but there is no detectable effect of residing in Kampala, likely due to hindered progress of expanding supply infrastructure. Targeting meal preparers with public education campaigns offers a path of changing cooking fuels use to those less polluting.

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Data availability

The data are available from the authors upon request.

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Funding

The authors acknowledge financial support from Peanut Innovation and Mycotoxin Lab/USAID for the collection of the data used in this study through the grant “Enhancing the peanut value chain, from processing to marketing peanut and peanut products,” USAID RF W-710-023.

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Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Contributions

WJF: conceptualization, data procurement, literature search, interpretation of results, and writing; Sulakshan Neupane: literature search, estimation of empirical relationships and contribution to writing.

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Wojciech J. Florkowski.

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Not required. Questionnaire did not probe for information requiring ethical approval.

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Not required. The survey was conducted by a commercial company selected by the Uganda Industrial Research Institute, Kampala, Uganda.

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Competing interests

The authors declare no competing interests.

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Responsible Editor: Roula Inglesi-Lotz

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Florkowski, W.J., Neupane, S. Cooking fuel frequency use in urban Uganda: addressing household air pollution. Environ Sci Pollut Res 30, 120722–120734 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11356-023-30255-8

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11356-023-30255-8

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