dc.identifier.citation |
Kimemia, D., Oladejo, A. O., & Van Niekerk, A. (2022). Special Issue-Energy Transitions in the Global South and Africa: Policy Imperatives, System Dynamics and Challenges. Social and Health Sciences, 20(1 and 2), 6-pages. |
en |
dc.description.abstract |
Energy poverty is pervasive with significant health and well-being ramifications,
especially for the Global South (United Nations Environment Program [UNEP], 2021).
Energy-impoverished communities are those that are dependent on traditional solid
fuels and flammable hydrocarbons that are usually burnt in unsafe, inefficient and
polluting stoves. The health and economic consequences are far-reaching, primarily
through household air pollution, burn injuries and poisonings, with consequential
health, neurological and psychological outcomes (Haagsma, et al., 2016; Wolf, Prüss Ustün & Vickers, 2016). The socio-economic ramifications of the energy burden are
enormous and generate social exclusion while limiting development in the affected
countries (Guzowski, Martin & Zabaloy, 2021). With the accumulation of evidence of
the impact of energy impoverishment, there have been increasing calls for expedited
and inclusive transitions to safe and health-promotive energy. For such transitions to be
truly just, they must centre on the needs of energy-impoverished people to ensure that
no one is left behind (UNEP, 2021). There is also increasing consensus that access to
safe and clean domestic energy is pivotal, if not a prerequisite, for a range of other global
priorities beyond health, including environmental protection and sustainability,
economic development and gender equality (Wolf et al., 2016). |
en |