Abstract

This paper examines households’ preferences, willingness to pay, and determinants of adopting improved cook stoves in rural Ethiopia. The study uses primary household data selected randomly from three districts in Ethiopia’s Oromia region. The data was collected using a mix of contingent and choice experiment methods of valuation. The former used a double-bounded value elicitation method, while the latter used a fractional factorial design to efficiently generate an attribute and level combination for the improved cook stoves. The study also used various discrete choice models for data analysis and also used models which account for scale and preference heterogeneity. The findings show that the sample households were aware of the effects of using traditional cook stoves and the benefits of using improved cook stoves. However, they were constrained by the availability of the new technology and discouraged by the low-quality of the products that they had used so far. The estimated mean willingness to pay ranged from about 150 Birr to 350 Birr which is lower than the market price of the improved cook stoves. Emission reduction, reducing fire risks, and the durability of the cook stove positively affected its adoption, while price discouraged its use. Higher levels of education, higher incomes, non-farm employment, and having more livestock increased the probability of adopting the new gas stoves. The study recommends that policymakers and product designers should use the mean willingness to pay and marginal rate of substitution for the different attributes as a benchmark for product design and pricing that fit households’ preferences and ability to pay. The lower mean willingness to pay means that a public subsidizing policy is needed for effectively disseminating improved cook stoves in rural Ethiopia.

Highlights

  • Energy is an important developmental tool at the forefront of the global economic and political agenda

  • This study showed that adoption of improved cook stoves was affected by various cook stove–specific attributes and socioeconomic characteristics

  • This paper extends the analysis of the improved cook stove choices to the generalized mixed logit model

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Summary

Introduction

Energy is an important developmental tool at the forefront of the global economic and political agenda. Lack of access to clean energy sources, health problems due to indoor air pollution, environmental degradation because of reliance on nature for collecting energy sources, and inefficiency of energy use technologies are well-known issues faced by rural households in Ethiopia. To address these questions, the study focuses on examining the preferences, willingness to pay, and determinants of the use of improved cook stoves among rural households in Ethiopia providing relevant information for rural energy planning and policy. The “Literature review” section presents a review of existing studies on the theory of non-market valuation techniques, costbenefit analyses, the non-market valuation method, and a theoretical framework of the choice models It shows the gap in literature on the valuation of improved cook stoves and willingness to pay estimations. The “Results and discussion” section discusses the results of the study, while the final section gives a conclusion and policy recommendations

Literature review
Results and discussion
Conclusion and policy recommendations
Ethics approval and consent to participate Considered
Full Text
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