Breaking

Ugandans Must Repent From Charcoal- Nankabirwa

Top story
Nankabirwa says many Ugandans including the elite have a phobia of LPG gas and electric cookers.
02 Nov 2024 14:04
Ruth Nankabirwa says the adoption of cleaner cooking technologies also guarantees pollution-free cooking places.

Audio 3

Ugandans should take advantage of the government’s initiatives aimed at promoting healthier and cleaner cooking in homes.   

The Energy and Minerals Minister, Ruth Nankbirwa says while the government has waived taxes on some of the appliances for cooking, many Ugandans including the elite are still stuck with cooking with charcoal.  

Charcoal supplies about 95 percent of the domestic and commercial cooking energy needs in Uganda. Charcoal is a popular fuel for cooking and heating in Uganda because it is deemed inexpensive, flexible to use, and easy to handle and store.  

The Ministry of Energy recently embarked on the distribution of liquefied petroleum gas cylinders.     However, Nankabirwa said many Ugandans including the elite kept them far in stores for fear of fire.  

Nankbirwa suggests the need to work on the mindset of a majority of Ugandans if these technologies are to be adapted and put to use. “Don’t assume that when you see us wearing suits and skirts, that we are out of the stigma of using LPG gas. People are stigmatized. They fear using gas,” she said.

///Cue In “People are stigmatized ….

Cue Out…. you use your cooker “/// 

She said while some of the clean cooking devices are getting cheaper, Ugandans are still stuck with the charcoal stoves commonly known as sigiri

. ///Cue In “Repent do away with…  

Cue Out….. you can afford”///   

“We have demonstrated that it is more expensive these days to use charcoal than electricity for cooking,” said Nankbirwa as she urged Ugandans to stop the cutting of forests for charcoal. She insisted that the adoption of cleaner cooking technologies also guarantees pollution-free cooking places.   

“So the sacks of charcoal we see on trucks in Kampala. Where are they going? They are going to your homes. And they are contributing to pollution in your kitchens” 

The United National Environment Programme (UNEP) has over the years warned that cooking smoke kills millions every year. It said household air pollution led to 3.1 million premature deaths in 2021 and is part of a larger crisis driving climate change and biodiversity loss.  

Globally, more than half the trees that are cut down are used for firewood and charcoal. As these forests fall, they take with them habitats home to a huge array of plants, animals and other life forms. 

Switching to cleaner fuels – such as kerosene and natural gas – can help counter deforestation and an alarming rise in biodiversity loss.     

The Government Initiatives for Clean Cooking   

The government with the support of agencies like GIZ has been promoting technologies that are powered by electricity, biogas, ethanol, and liquid petroleum gas, which are cleaner and more efficient than their solid fuels. 

They also include stoves that use high-efficiency charcoal and biomass pellets; these devices produce less smoke than traditional biomass stoves. The decision to waive taxes on solar panels was part of the effort towards the promotion of solar-powered technologies for cooking.     

In October, the Ministry of Energy signed an agreement with Global Gases Group to construct, own and operate an LPG cylinder manufacturing plant, cylinder filling stations, and distribution centres in different locations in the country.   Global Gases Group pledged to locally produce and distribute 500,000 LPG-filled cylinders and their accessories commencing in the third quarter of the 2025/2026 Financial Year. 

The government allocated land to Global Gases Group on top of other incentives as well as a purchase and supply agreement for the cylinders once manufacturing began.

Nankabirwa says the government will create a conducive environment for these technologies, but Ugandans have to make use of them. “All Ugandans out there don’t wait for government. It is your health. It is your life. 

The government will have to make sure that the technologies are zero-rated, zero-taxed so that they are affordable,” said Nankabirwa.   

///Cue In “When we give you   

Cue Out …. Tilenga and Kingfisher” ///  

LPG usage is les than 1% at the household level in Uganda and mainly in urban areas. The minister says local manufacture of the cylinders and later LPG gas at the Tilenga and Kingfisher oil fields in the Albertine is an opportunity for all the households in Uganda to embrace clean cooking and save the environment.

The Third National Development Plan 2020/21 - 2024/25 under the Sustainable Energy Development Programme commits the Government to reduce the share of biomass energy used for cooking from 88% in the FY 2018/19 to 50%.

It also commits the Government to increase the share of clean energy used for cooking from 15% in FY 2018/19 to 50% by 2024/25.

Uganda is pursuing strategies to transition towards socio-economic transformation and sustainable development.

Support us


Images 2

Entities

Keywords