COVID-19 Lockdown in a Kenyan Informal Settlement: Impacts on Household Energy and Food Security

Authors

Shupler, Matthew
Mwitari, James
Gohole, Arthur
de Cuevas, Rachel Anderson
Puzzolo, Elisa
Čukić, Iva
Nix, Emily
Pope, Dan

Type

Article, Journal

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press

Type

Article, Journal

Abstract

A COVID-19 lockdown may impact household fuel use and food security for ~700 million subSaharan Africans who rely on polluting fuels (e.g. wood, kerosene) for household energy and typically work in the informal economy. In an informal settlement in Nairobi, surveys administered before (n=474) and after (n=194) a mandatory COVID-19-related community lockdown documented socioeconomic/household energy impacts. During lockdown, 95% of participants indicated income decline or cessation and 88% reported being food insecure. Three quarters of participants cooked less frequently and half altered their diet. One quarter (27%) of households primarily using liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) for cooking before lockdown switched to kerosene (14%) or wood (13%). These results indicate the livelihoods of urban Kenyan families were deleteriously affected by COVID-19 lockdown, with a likely rise in household air pollution from community-level increases in polluting fuel use. To safeguard public health, policies should prioritize enhancing clean fuel and food access among the urban poor.

Description

This preprint from MedRxiv is now published in Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews doi: 10.1016/j.rser.2021.111018

Keywords

Clean cooking, Household energy, COVID-19, Air pollution, Nairobi, Informal urban settlement, Food security

Citation

Shupler, M., Mwitari, J., Gohole, A., de Cuevas, R. A., Puzzolo, E., Cukic, I., ... & Pope, D. (2020). COVID-19 Lockdown in a Kenyan informal settlement: Impacts on household energy and food security. MedRxiv.

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By