Time for Clean Energy? Cleaner Fuels and Women’s Time in Home Production

Author:

Afridi Farzana1,Debnath Sisir2,Dinkelman Taryn3ORCID,Sareen Komal2

Affiliation:

1. Indian Statistical Institute (Delhi) and the National University of Singapore, Lead Academic at the IGC’s India Program, and a research fellow at IZA

2. Indian Institute of Technology (Delhi)

3. University of Notre Dame, a research associate at NBER, and a research fellow at IZA and CEPR

Abstract

AbstractIn much of the developing world, cooking accounts for the largest share of women’s time in home production. Does relying on solid fuels drive this time burden? This study revisits a clean energy information experiment in rural India to assess the time savings’ potential of cleaner cooking technologies. Treatment villages were randomly assigned to receive information about negative health effects of cooking with solid fuels and about public subsidies for cleaner liquid petroleum gas (LPG). Time-use data indicate that primary cooks spend almost 24 hours cooking each week. Cleaner fuel use is correlated with about 140 minutes less cooking time each week. Yet households only reduce their weekly cooking time by about 35 minutes in response to the randomized clean energy information nudge. Factors limiting the impact of clean energy nudges on the choice of home production technologies and time use are discussed and an avenue for future research is suggested.

Funder

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

American Economic Association

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Economics and Econometrics,Finance,Development,Accounting

Reference42 articles.

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