Heating and lighting: understanding overlooked energy-consumption activities in the Indian residential sector

Author:

Navinya Chimurkar,Kapoor Taveen S,Anurag Gupta,Lokhande Pradnya,Sharma Renuka,Prasad SV Laxmi,Nagendra SM Shiva,Kumari Jyoti,Habib Gazala,Arya Rahul,Mandal Tuhin K,Muthalagu Akila,Qureshi Asif,Najar Tanveer Ahmad,Jehangir Arshid,Jain Supreme,Goel Anubha,Rabha Shahadev,Saikia Binoy K,Chaudhary Pooja,Sinha BaerbelORCID,Haswani Diksha,Raman Ramya Sunder,Dhandapani AbishegORCID,Iqbal JawedORCID,Mukherjee Sauryadeep,Chatterjee Abhijit,Lian Yang,Pandithurai G,Venkataraman Chandra,Phuleria Harish CORCID

Abstract

Abstract Understanding the climate impact of residential emissions starts with determining the fuel consumption of various household activities. While cooking emissions have been widely studied, non-cooking energy-consumption activities in the residential sector such as heating and lighting, have been overlooked owing to the unavailability of data at national levels. The present study uses data from the Carbonaceous Aerosol Emissions, Source Apportionment and Climate Impacts (COALESCE) project, which consists of residential surveys over 6000 households across 49 districts of India, to understand the energy consumed by non-cooking residential activities. Regression models are developed to estimate information in non-surveyed districts using demographic, housing, and meteorological data as predictors. Energy demand is further quantified and distributed nationally at a 4 × 4 km resolution. Results show that the annual energy consumption from non-cooking activities is 1106 [201] PJ, which is equal to one-fourth of the cooking energy demand. Freely available biomass is widely used to heat water on traditional stoves, even in the warmer regions of western and southern India across all seasons. Space heating (51%) and water heating (42%) dominate non-cooking energy consumption. In comparison, nighttime heating for security personnel (5%), partly-residential personal heating by guards, dominant in urban centers and kerosene lighting (2%) utilize minimal energy. Biomass fuels account for over 90% of the non-cooking consumption, while charcoal and kerosene make up the rest. Half of the energy consumption occurs during winter months (DJF), while 10% of the consumption occurs during monsoon, when kerosene lighting is the highest. Firewood is the most heavily used fuel source in western India, charcoal in the northern hilly regions, agricultural residues and dung cake in the Indo-Gangetic plains, and kerosene in eastern India. The study shows that ∼20% of residential energy consumption is on account of biomass-based heating and kerosene lighting activities.

Funder

The Indian Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change

Publisher

IOP Publishing

Subject

Atmospheric Science,Earth-Surface Processes,Geology,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous),General Environmental Science,Food Science

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