The fuelwood crisis in southern Africa - Relating fuelwood use to livelihoods in a rural village

被引:29
作者
Dovie D.B.K. [1 ]
Witkowski E.T.F. [1 ]
Shackleton C.M. [2 ]
机构
[1] School of Animal, Plant and Environmental Sciences, Univ. Witwatersrand, Wits 2050, J.
[2] Department of Environmental Sciences, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, 6140, South Africa
关键词
communal rangelands; fuelwood; livelihoods; policy; savanna; South Africa;
D O I
10.1023/B:GEJO.0000033597.34013.9f
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The aim of the paper is to examine wood as a source of fuel energy in rural South Africa and factors influencing its usage. The analysis is based on household profiles and characteristics (e.g., gender, caste, population and income) in a livelihood framework. Fuelwood consumption was estimated to be 692 kg/capita, and 4343 kg/user household per annum, valued at $311 per household. Consumption was modelled in relation to informal and formal cash incomes, and population of children, female and male adults. However, only the population of female adults could significantly influence consumption of fuelwood. This implied that where there were more women in a household, consumption was likely to be high. This might be due to the majority of women doing the cooking and heating in the household. Any change in the value of cash income of households had no significant impacts on fuelwood consumed. Cash incomes might therefore not be strong determinants of the types of energy used by rural households. The average quantity of wood consumed for fuel energy in summer was not significantly different from consumption in winter. Some households perpetually used more wood than others. The study further showed that harvesting of wood for fuel energy is not opportunistic, but requires reallocation of time for other livelihood activities in times of shortage. The fuelwood crisis is not simple and not only about shortage of fuelwood and/or population growth but linked to household profiles and other livelihood strategies and subsequently vulnerability of households. These would require thorough investigation and understanding in relation to precise demand and supply data for fuelwood before the fuelwood problem can be sufficiently managed.
引用
收藏
页码:123 / 133
页数:10
相关论文
共 47 条
[1]  
An L., Lupi F., Liu J.G., Linderman M.A., Huang J.Y., Modelling the choice to switch from fuelwood to electricity Implications for giant panda habitat conservation, Ecological Economics, 42, 3, pp. 445-457, (2002)
[2]  
Anderson D., Fiswick R., Fuelwood consumption and deforestation in African countries, World Bank Staff Working Paper No. 704, 704, (1984)
[3]  
Bembridge T.J., Tarlton J.E., Woodfuel in Ciskei: A headload study, South African Forestry Journal, 154, pp. 88-93, (1990)
[4]  
Bembridge T.J., Woodlots, woodfuel and energy strategies for Ciskei, South African Forestry Journal, 155, pp. 42-50, (1990)
[5]  
Bernard H.R., Research Methods in Anthropology: Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches, 2nd Edition, (1994)
[6]  
Black R., Sessay M.F., Forced migration, environmental change and woodfuel issues in the Senegal River Valley, Environmental Conservation, 24, 3, pp. 251-260, (1997)
[7]  
Brouwer I.D., Hoorweg J.C., VanLiere M.J., When households run out of fuel: Responses of rural households to decreasing fuelwood availability, Ntcheu District, Malawi, World Development, 25, 2, pp. 255-266, (1997)
[8]  
Campbell B.M., Costanza R., Van Den Belt M., Land use options in dry tropical woodland ecosystems in Zimbabwe: Introduction, overview and synthesis, Ecological Economics, 33, pp. 341-351, (2000)
[9]  
Campbell B.M., Luckert M., Scoones I., Local level valuation of savanna resources: A case study from Zimbabwe, Economic Botany, 51, 1, pp. 59-77, (1997)
[10]  
Clarke J., Cavendish W., Coyote C., Rural households and miombo woodlands: Use, value and management, The Miombo in Transition: Woodlands and Welfare in Africa, pp. 101-136, (1996)