Smarter
Living with William Odinga Balikuddembe
If you live
in Uganda, you have 90 percent chances
of depending on firewood, charcoal or crop residues as your main source of
energy. This generally is known as
biomass energy.
Many of you reading this piece were born in rural areas but now live in
townships. Previously kerosene, at best, lit your houses, mainly at dinner
time, through a wick feeding from a little tin (Omunaku tadooba). The fire was blown off immediately after dinner
to save kerosene and you went to bed in thick darkness.
You now have electricity. You watch
TV, iron clothes and can even manage a fridge. When it comes to cooking, however,
you use charcoal. The unit cost of electricity, if you use one unit per day, is
about UGX 1000 (after considering the unit charge of UGX 771.1, 18% VAT, UGX 3,360
service fee per month and some discounts). This is a lot costly for activities
that demand a lot of energy such as cooking.
You have sweet memories of your childhood when in the village, you sat
with your peers around the three-stone fireplace pushing in firewood for the
food to cook as your mother or grandmother worked on something else. Sometimes
you roasted maize on the sides and had to keep a keen eye on it lest it burnt. You
chocked, sneezed, your eyes itched and tears rolled down when smoke entered them.
But in the end, you had the broadest smile as you exited the kitchen with your roasted
warm bite safely gripped in our hand.
Not much has changed since in terms of practice. Rural areas, where most
Ugandans live, still rely largely on firewood, which contributes a whole 78.6
percent to Uganda’s total energy consumption.
Charcoal, which is from wood, comes in with 5.6 percent while crop
residues contribute 4.7 percent.
What has changed is that as our population has been increasing, we have
been depleting our vegetation at a high rate, contributing to environmental destruction.
Statistics from the National Environment Management Authority (NEMA) and the
Uganda Bureau of Statics indicate that Uganda’s forest cover dropped from 24
percent in 1960 to 11 percent in 2015, agriculture and energy being the key drivers
behind this.
Uganda’s innovation or adoption of innovations in energy has, however,
been growing over the years, sometimes with support of donors. Some innovations
are intended to combat environmental abuse but most of the adoption is based
not on that, but on cost effectiveness.
We have seen the wood cook stove improve from three-stones to energy
saving clay fabrications. Charcoal stoves have transited from thin energy
wasting bare iron sheet to thick clay or cement heat concentrating stoves externally
lined with iron sheets. The later have between 35 to 50 percent more energy
efficiency compared to the former. This means that with the improved cook
stove, a sack of charcoal would take you twice the period as compared to the
bare iron sheet stove.
Now we can go a step further. We can be able to produce more charcoal
from wood using innovative methods such as retort
and casamance kilns. While our
traditional method of burying wood in earth can only convert 10 percent of the
wood it is fed with into charcoal, these two can deliver between 28 and 40
percent charcoal yield, according to experts.
The retort kiln is a stationary structure of bricks while with casamance,
you just have to weld some drums and fix to our traditional kiln as a chimney.
Retort kiln. Photo: UNDP Uganda |
The Ministry of Energy and Mineral Development (MOEMD) has been promoting
these technologies since May 2014 in select districts of Kiboga, Kiryandongo,
Nakaseke and Mubende under the Green Charcoal Project.
“These are simple technologies,” says John Tumuhimbise, an assistant
commissioner in the MOEMD and the project coordinator, at the same time
acknowledging that the cost of the technologies may be a hindrance for some
people.
“You may be looking at UGX 600,000 which may not be easily affordable,”
he adds.
Such innovations in the way we produce and use energy will not only make
it cheaper to cook, save the environment, but also save us from several health risks
including lung problems.
Story published in Print and Online by The Sunrise