Abstract

Substantial literature exists on household lifestyles and related energy use and emissions in the global north, but little is known for many countries the global south. We estimate household-level energy footprints for Zambia covering direct (traditional and modern energy carriers) and indirect energy use, and adopting energy extended multiregional input–output. We employ final energy consumption, as it is closer to energy services and thus the purpose of energy use than the total primary energy use. The inequality in energy footprints differs from the inequality in incomes: the poorest half of the households have similar energy footprints and only high-income urban households have significant indirect energy footprints, associated with spend on goods and services. We examine the association between energy footprints and basic well-being measured in terms of physical health, education, nutrition and access to clean water using logistic regression, for a sub-sample of households with children under the age of five. We find that access to provisioning systems is more important than income for need satisfaction. Rural households have limited access to modern energy and provisioning systems and as a result fewer of them attain desirable well-being outcomes. We conclude that access to collective provisioning systems such as education, electricity and indoor sanitation is more important for household need satisfaction than individual provisioning in the form of ownership of durables, or even income. Further research is needed to improve the understanding of the association between energy use and needs satisfaction as it is crucial for addressing decarbonisation and human development agendas.

Highlights

  • A considerable volume of literature has been published on household energy use in the global north

  • Zambian households spend most of their money on food and their energy footprint is dominated by house-fuels used to cook it

  • Whilst less than one-fifth of the average energy footprint relates to in­ direct energy, indirect energy accounts for almost the entire household budget (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

A considerable volume of literature has been published on household energy use in the global north This literature has established that in­ direct energy use related to goods and services dominates over direct energy use and the associated use of dwelling heating and private transport [1,2,3,4]. These studies suggest that income and expenditure are the best predictors of household resource use in the global north [5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12]. Her findings resonate with those of others that have linked access to electricity to improved health and education [27,28,29,30]

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