Publication

Household energy choice for cooking: Do rural income growth and ethnic difference play a role?

Date
Type
Conference Contribution - unpublished
Fields of Research
Abstract
This paper investigates the associations between rural income growth, ethnic differences, and household cooking fuel choice, using the 2016 China Labor-force Dynamics Survey Data. We consider the presence of fuel-stacking behavior (using multiple fuels) amongst survey households and classify cooking fuels into clean fuels, non-clean fuels, and mixed fuels. Data collected from 6,461 rural households are estimated using a multinomial logit model. Findings suggest that relative to households at the lowest income quintile 1, those at the income quintiles 2-5 are more likely to use clean fuels rather than non-clean fuels for cooking, and the magnitudes of the effects increase across the income quintiles. Compared with the majority Han Chinese households, ethnic minority households are more likely to use mixed fuels rather than clean fuels for cooking. Only those ethnic minority households at the highest income level (quintile 5) appear to be more likely to use clean cooking fuels.
Source DOI
Rights
Creative Commons Rights
Access Rights