The Guardian (Nigeria)

Nigeria needs single policy to address clean cooking challenges, says Eleri

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Ewah Eleri is the Executive Director, Internatio­nal Centre for Energy, Environmen­t & Developmen­t ( ICEED) and top member of the Nigerian Alliance for Clean Cookstoves ( NACC), a public private partnershi­p. He spoke to CHINEDUM UWAEGBULAM on efforts to meet Nationally Determined Contributi­ons ( NDC) and Short- Lived Climate Pollutants ( SLCP) commitment­s.

ATradition­al cooking with firewood and other polluting fuels are claiming lives, destroying the environmen­t and putting a burden on women. Do we have clear- cut policies and strategies for low carbon energy developmen­t in Nigeria? CCORDING to available statistics from the World Health Organisati­on ( WHO), smoke from the kitchen leads to 95,300 deaths yearly in Nigeria. After malaria and HIV/ Aids, indoor air pollution is possibly Nigeria’s third highest killer.

For those who survive the smoke there are serious health consequenc­es. Children born to women who are exposed during pregnancy, risk low birth weight, impaired mental abilities and birth defects.

In many ways, the lack of access to clean cooking is Nigeria’s silent energy crisis. But the costs are primarily borne by women. In many parts of the country, women and girls are responsibl­e for fetching firewood. This is time that they could go schooling and doing other empowermen­t opportunit­ies.

Besides the drudgery of collecting firewood, women and girls also bear the additional burden of inhaling the deadly smoke. Curiously, issues of clean cooking hardly make it to the priority list of energy policy making.

Beyond the health impacts, Nigeria has 3.5 per cent yearly rate of deforestat­ion and loses approximat­ely 350,000 - 400,000 hectares per year. The widespread use of wood for cooking contribute­s a sizeable share of deforestat­ion, alongside expanding agricultur­e, bush burning and other practices. Drought and desertific­ation, especially in the Northern parts of the country accentuate­s the process of deforestat­ion.

Nigeria requires a rapid transition to cleaner cooking with cooking gas, electricit­y, biofuels and efficient use of solid biomass. However, the clean cooking energy transition has been slower in Nigeria than in most countries such as Ghana, Ethiopia or Ivory Coast. The lack of access to clean cooking in Nigeria is a result of both a policy and market failure.

For decades, we spent huge sums of money subsidisin­g kerosene - a polluting cooking fuel that was mostly imported. This wrongheade­d subsidy scheme came at the cost of a preference for cooking gas, or Liquefied Petroleum Gas ( LPG), which was cleaner and with significan­t local production.

When we woke up to promoting LPG, the country had to start from a very low- level of penetratio­n. Today, the little progress made in expanding LPG usage around the country, has vanished by the prevailing high prices of the product. A 12.5kilogramm­e of cooking gas that cost N2, 800 two years ago, now goes for about N10, 000. Families are now climbing down the energy ladder and going back to wood and charcoal. With the deepening poverty in the country, the dream of universal access to clean cooking seems more remote by the day.

A second policy failure was the lack of progress towards cleaner cooking with electricit­y. While a poorer country, such as Ethiopia has about a third of its households cooking with electricit­y, less than one per cent of all our households cook exclusivel­y with electricit­y. The complete failure of Nigeria’s power sector reform stymied progress towards modern cooking services using electricit­y.

Switching more households to LPG or other cleaner fuels and technologi­es is held back by significan­t market failure. Over the past two decades, stronger companies, such as the bigger internatio­nal oil companies exited the downstream end of the cooking gas market.

Smaller under- capitalise­d companies, weighed down by poor infrastruc­ture, financing and regulation, dominated distributi­on and retailing.

Lately, the Federal Government has embarked on the developmen­t of a comprehens­ive policy on clean cooking. Until now, policies are fragmented, lacking in coherence and consistenc­y. For us to get it right, we must situate our cooking energy policies within the mainstream of a national developmen­t strategy that tackles energy poverty, inequality, reduces the burden on women and projects our commitment to address climate crisis.

Do you think the country will fulfil its obligation to provide access to LPG for 48 per cent and improved biomass cookstoves to 13 per cent of households to expand access to clean cooking by 2030?

In the recently updated Nationally Determined Contributi­on to the Paris Climate Agreement ( NDC), Nigeria pledged to scale up access to cooking gas for 48 per cent of the population and improved biomass cookstoves for 13 per cent, mostly in rural areas by 2030. It will take a seismic change in policies and prioritiza­tion to achieve these goals.

However, if the expansion of access to clean cooking becomes part of the implementa­tion of key national developmen­t strategies, Nigeria can surpass these goals and reap the co- benefits in health, growth, environmen­tal sustainabi­lity and will address the negative impacts on women.

But one key barrier is the growing poverty in the country. According to the World Bank, Nigeria has the greatest number of people living in poverty in the world. Affordabil­ity of clean cooking options among the poorest segment of the society will continue to be a barrier within today’s market- based approach. Not only will demand be weak among poor households, the bottom of the energy pyramid is also a segment that is the least informed of the value propositio­n of cleaner fuels and technologi­es.

New and innovative policy and financing options are needed to reach the poorest households, especially in rural areas. Internatio­nal policy templates and best practices already exist. Countries such as India and Indonesia have made significan­t progress in the disseminat­ion of LPG fuels and cooking devises among poor households.

East African countries have had good experience­s in expanding the use of efficient solid biomass stoves. New opportunit­ies in climate finance, where the poor can earn carbon credits for emission reductions from their cleaner fuels and technologi­es raise hope for the poor.

The Renewable Energy Master Plan ( REMP) of 2005 articulate­s Nigeria’s vision, targets and road map for addressing key developmen­t challenges facing Nigeria through the accelerate­d developmen­t and exploitati­on of renewable energy. What are the benefits and barriers to low- carbon developmen­t and energy access in Nigeria?

The Renewable Energy Master Plan was the first attempt to articulate a coherent vision for a future driven essentiall­y by renewable energy in Nigeria. It outlined a plan for a transition from fossil energy to a carbon neutral developmen­t, where natural gas provides a bridge. However, a key barrier remains. By maintainin­g an artificial­ly low price for grid electricit­y, we made solar and small hydro technologi­es unattracti­ve.

Today’s low electricit­y tariff is not only the greatest stumbling block to investment­s in grid power supply, it is also the most important disincenti­ve for renewable energy technologi­es. This is similar to what we have in the petroleum sector. Current petroleum subsidies are not only haemorrhag­ing public finances, it is preventing Nigeria from having an efficient transporta­tion system and mocks our commitment to addressing climate change. We need political courage to remove these destructiv­e energy subsidies.

The Nigerian Alliance for Clean Cooking ( NACC) was launched in 2012. What were the aims and objectives of the alliance and the significan­t impacts it has made to ensure growth of the clean cookstoves market in Nigeria?

The Nigerian Alliance for Clean Cooking is a public private partnershi­p to expand access to clean cooking in Nigeria. It brings together several federal government agencies, such as the Federal Ministry of Environmen­t, Ministry of Petroleum Resources, Federal Ministry of Women Affairs, Energy Commission of Nigeria, National Orientatio­n Agency, together with private sector companies, NGOS and internatio­nal developmen­t partners to pursue the goal of universal access to clean cooking.

The alliance uses three approaches. First it seeks to create an enabling environmen­t by working with government to address policy barriers within the sector. Currently, the alliance is working with several government agencies led by the Federal Ministry of Environmen­t to develop a single policy framework for clean cooking that covers all cooking fuels and technologi­es.

Secondly, the alliance is working with its partners to strengthen the supply chain for clean cooking fuels and technologi­es by supporting companies with technical training and access to finance opportunit­ies. Thirdly, it focuses on enhancing demand by supporting behaviour change communicat­ion and public awareness.

Through the work of the alliance, a common platform has been created for coordinate­d national action to address this important issue. In partnershi­p with the Federal Ministry of Environmen­t, clean cooking was adopted as a key national priority in the recently submitted Nigerian national commitment to the Paris Agreement on climate change.

Currently, the alliance is working with partners to develop the national policy on clean cooking. It has also secured the commitment of the National Assembly to initiate a Bill for an Act to Expand Clean Cooking Access in Nigeria.

Beyond policies and legislativ­e advocacy, the alliance has worked with various bodies to increase national awareness of the challenges to and opportunit­ies for reaching universal access to clean cooking fuels and technologi­es in Nigeria.

The cookingene­rgy sector has long been the purview of donor and nongovernm­ental organisati­ons globally, with only a few highprofil­e efforts led by national government­s like when the

There is an increasing awareness among agencies of the Federal Government on the importance of addressing the problems of cooking energy in Nigeria. The Office of the Vice President has particular­ly provided leadership, especially on matters regarding the expansion of the LPG market. Both the Senate and the House of Representa­tives have also initiated action on these issues.

Recently, the Minister of Environmen­t launched an Inter- ministeria­l Committee on Clean Cooking. This inter- agency forum has been saddled with the responsibi­lity of developing a national policy.

More can be done by government to coordinate this all- important issue. Clean cooking seems to be an institutio­nal orphan, where no single government agency is responsibl­e for implementi­ng government policies. This can often brew cold war among agencies

pursing the same gov

Goodluck Jonathan administra­tion announced a N9.2 billion programme. What type of support does the alliance need from the Federal Government?

e r n m e n t policies.

“When we woke up to promoting LPG, the country had to start from a very low- level of penetratio­n. Today, the little progress made in expanding LPG usage around the country, has vanished by the prevailing high prices of the product. A 12.5kilogramm­e of cooking gas that cost N2, 800 two years ago, now goes for about N10, 000. Families are now climbing down the energy ladder and going back to wood and charcoal. With the deepening poverty in the country, the dream of universal access to clean cooking seems more remote by the day.

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Eleri

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