Title:
Towards reforming Africa’s wood fuel for enhancing food productivity and environmental protection

dc.contributor.author Bako, Sabo
dc.contributor.corporatename Ahmadu Bello University. Dept. of Political Science
dc.date.accessioned 2010-11-08T20:40:09Z
dc.date.available 2010-11-08T20:40:09Z
dc.date.issued 2009-10-08
dc.description Presented at GLOBELICS 2009, 7th International Conference, 6-8 October, Dakar, Senegal. en_US
dc.description Parallel session 6. Innovation for sustainable energy
dc.description.abstract This paper explains the growing relationship between the crises in Africa’s most widely used energy of wood fuel and food production in the continent. It argues that the optimal productivity of agricultural land has been on a steady decline due to the massive disappearance of soil nutrients occasioned by systematic tree cutting, constituting one of the central factors responsible for lowering food production in Africa. Wood fuel is the biggest source of energy for the overwhelming African households, in which over ninety percent of the continent’s populations depend on for cooking, heating and other domestic energy generating activities. It is, at the same time, the fastest diminishing energy due partly to its wasteful mode of utilization and partly to the growing gap between its consumption and production. The food crisis, manifests itself at the growing Africa’s food deficits and imports, shortages and soaring prices, and the increasing number of Africa’s population afflicted by hunger, malnutrition and mortalities. Using gap theory, data accumulated from wood fuel consumption and food production for the past forty years have been correlated in order to establish the growing pattern of their linkages and intersection. The result of the study shows that wood fuel and food crises are not only interconnected, but they also reinforce each other in their growing manifestation and gravity. The current Africa’s food deficit could be attributed to up to 70% to the negative effects of wood fuel utilization and depletion. In fact, by the current rates of wood fuel consumption, population explosion and food decline, food deficit in Africa is expected to double in the next decade. This ugly situation can be prevented on the short term by reducing the wood fuel wastage and utilization of non tree or dead biomass, through an effective but multiple purpose stoves, which could save about 90 percent of the inefficiently utilized trees and increase food production by the same percentage in the continent. The long term solution to wood fuel and food crises could be sought in what I propose as a complete shift from wood fuel to much more easily renewable and sustainable solar and wind energy, in order to provide sufficient food for all and protect the biodiversity of the African environment. en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/1853/35827
dc.language.iso en_US en_US
dc.publisher Georgia Institute of Technology en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseries GLOBELICS09. Session 6 en_US
dc.subject Wood fuel consumption and food production linkages en_US
dc.subject Africa en_US
dc.subject Food deficit en_US
dc.subject Gap theory en_US
dc.subject Soil depletion en_US
dc.subject Systematic tree cutting en_US
dc.subject Solar and wind energy
dc.title Towards reforming Africa’s wood fuel for enhancing food productivity and environmental protection en_US
dc.type Text
dc.type.genre Proceedings
dspace.entity.type Publication
local.contributor.corporatename School of Public Policy
local.contributor.corporatename Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts
local.relation.ispartofseries Globelics Conference
relation.isOrgUnitOfPublication a3789037-aec2-41bb-9888-1a95104b7f8c
relation.isOrgUnitOfPublication b1049ff1-5166-442c-9e14-ad804b064e38
relation.isSeriesOfPublication 9bcdf48e-4586-4550-b033-2063df2fe342
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