Abstract:
Approximately 2.8 billion people rely on polluting cooking fuels (e.g. wood, kerosene), exposing
them to health-damaging household air pollution. A key access barrier to clean cooking fuels
(e.g. liquefied petroleum gas (LPG)) is affordability. By enabling households to pay in small
increments, pay-as-you-go (PAYG) LPG could help promote clean cooking, and support
continued LPG use through periods of economic downturn. We investigate the ability of PAYG
LPG to sustain access to clean cooking from January 2018- June 2020, including during COVID 19 lockdown (March-June 2020) in an informal settlement in Nairobi, Kenya. We utilize novel
PAYG LPG smart meter data to document cooking/spending patterns from 426 PAYG LPG
customers and semi-structured interviews among a subset of seven households. Objective
cooking pattern comparisons are made to those cooking with full 6kg cylinder LPG and polluting
fuel users from 23 households in peri-urban Eldoret in western Kenya, using stove monitoring
data. Customers’ average PAYG LPG consumption was 0.97 kg/capita/month (11.6
kg/capita/year) prior to COVID-19 lockdown. Despite adverse economic impacts of the
lockdown, 95% of households continued using PAYG LPG, and consumption increased to 1.22
kg/capita/month (March-June 2020). Daily cooking events using PAYG LPG increased by 60%
(1.07 events/day (pre-lockdown) to 1.72 events/day (lockdown)). In contrast, among seven
households purchasing full 6kg cylinder LPG in Eldoret, average days/month using LPG
declined by 75% (17 to four days) during COVID-19 lockdown. Median PAYG LPG payment
frequency doubled (from every 8 days to every 4 days) during lockdown, while average payment
amount was nearly halved (336 Kenyan Shillings (KSh)/US$3.08 to 179 KSh/US$1.64).
Interviewed customers reported numerous benefits of PAYG LPG beyond fuel affordability,
including safety, time savings, cylinder delivery and user-friendliness. PAYG LPG helped
sustain clean cooking during COVID-19 lockdown, possibly averting increases in polluting
cooking fuel use and associated household air pollution exposures.