Energy Strategy for Rural India : Evidence from Six States

The fieldwork for this report consisted of a household energy survey of households living in 180 villages in six states (Andhra Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh, Maharashtra, Punjab, Rajasthan and West Bengal). The report was initiated in response to concerns that energy strategies for rural India were not progressing toward modern energy use.It examines energy use, including renewable energy, to determine if households in rural areas have access to modern forms of energy use. In addition, analysis and recommendations are targeted toward poor households, who spend a significant proportion of their time and income on energy. Despite urbanization, 74 percent of India (some 120 million households) reside in rural areas, villagers still depend on traditional fuels to meet their energy needs. Fuelwood, crop residues, dung and other traditional fuels, as presently used, have inherent disadvantages: collection is arduous and time-consuming; combustion is difficult to control; and cooking captures a fraction of these fuels' available energy. Today, rural people who switch to kerosene and LPG for cooking spend about one hour per day collecting fuelwood and purchasing wood at local markets. The Government is committed to improving energy services in rural areas, however, the cross-sectoral nature of the problems complicates solutions.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC 2002-08
Subjects:AIR, AIR POLLUTION, ALCOHOL, ASH, BIOGAS, BIOMASS, BIOMASS ENERGY, BIOMASS FUELS, BIOMASS RESOURCES, CHARCOAL, CITIES, CLIMATE, COAL, COLORS, COMBUSTION, COMMERCIAL ENERGY, COMMERCIAL FUELS, CONSUMPTION OF ENERGY, COOKING FUELS, COOKING STOVES, COOLING, DEFORESTATION, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ELECTRIC APPLIANCES, ELECTRIC LAMPS, ELECTRIC LIGHTING, ELECTRICITY, ELECTRICITY BOARDS, ELECTRICITY GENERATION, ELECTRICITY SECTOR, ELECTRICITY USE, END-USE, ENERGY CONSUMPTION, ENERGY CONVERSION, ENERGY COSTS, ENERGY EFFICIENCY, ENERGY EXPENDITURES, ENERGY MARKETS, ENERGY NEEDS, ENERGY PRACTICES, ENERGY PROGRAMS, ENERGY RESEARCH, ENERGY SECTOR, ENERGY SECTOR MANAGEMENT ASSISTANCE, ENVIRONMENTAL DAMAGE, FANS, FLOODING, FORESTRY, FORESTS, FUEL, FUEL CONSUMPTION, FUEL TYPE, FUEL USE, FUELS, FUELWOOD, HOUSEHOLD COOKING, HOUSEHOLD ENERGY, HOUSING, HUMAN HEALTH, INCOME, INDOOR AIR POLLUTION, INDOOR ENVIRONMENT, IRRIGATION, KEROSENE LAMPS, LAND USE, LEACHING, LIQUEFIED PETROLEUM GAS, LPG, LPG SUBSIDIES, NUTRIENTS, OIL, OIL EQUIVALENT, PETROLEUM GAS, PETROLEUM PRODUCTS, PHOTOVOLTAICS, PILOT PROJECTS, RAINFALL, RENEWABLE ENERGY, RENEWABLE ENERGY INDUSTRY, RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES, RENEWABLE ENERGY SYSTEMS, RENEWABLE ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES, RIVERS, RURAL ELECTRIFICATION, RURAL ENERGY, RURAL ENERGY USE, SMOKE, SOCIAL INDICATORS, SOIL, SOILS, SUSTAINABLE ENERGY, SUSTAINABLE ENERGY PRACTICES, URBAN AREAS, URBAN HOUSEHOLDS, URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2002/08/2117743/energy-strategy-rural-india-evidence-six-states
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/19893
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Summary:The fieldwork for this report consisted of a household energy survey of households living in 180 villages in six states (Andhra Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh, Maharashtra, Punjab, Rajasthan and West Bengal). The report was initiated in response to concerns that energy strategies for rural India were not progressing toward modern energy use.It examines energy use, including renewable energy, to determine if households in rural areas have access to modern forms of energy use. In addition, analysis and recommendations are targeted toward poor households, who spend a significant proportion of their time and income on energy. Despite urbanization, 74 percent of India (some 120 million households) reside in rural areas, villagers still depend on traditional fuels to meet their energy needs. Fuelwood, crop residues, dung and other traditional fuels, as presently used, have inherent disadvantages: collection is arduous and time-consuming; combustion is difficult to control; and cooking captures a fraction of these fuels' available energy. Today, rural people who switch to kerosene and LPG for cooking spend about one hour per day collecting fuelwood and purchasing wood at local markets. The Government is committed to improving energy services in rural areas, however, the cross-sectoral nature of the problems complicates solutions.