Descending the energy ladder? Oil price shocks and domestic fuel choices in Kano, Nigeria

Type Journal Article - Land use policy
Title Descending the energy ladder? Oil price shocks and domestic fuel choices in Kano, Nigeria
Author(s)
Volume 26
Issue 4
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2009
Page numbers 1090-1099
URL https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Roy_Maconachie/publication/223791894_Descending_the_energy_ladd​er_Oil_price_shocks_and_domestic_fuel_choices_in_Kano_Nigeria/links/0f3175345568a32068000000.pdf
Abstract
In recent years, the densely populated region around the burgeoning city of Kano in northern Nigeria has
been the focus of much academic enquiry into the links between vegetation modification and fuelwood
production and consumption. While many scholars have praised the socio-economic and ecological sustainability
of Kano’s rural–urban interface, arguing that indigenous agro-forestry systems will continue to
resist urban fuelwood pressures for many years to come, other less optimistic observers have warned that
exposure to a rapidly changing world economy is challenging traditional resource management systems
like never before. Focusing on the case of Kano and its resource hinterlands, recent field-based evidence
presented in this paper suggests that the latter supposition may be gaining increasing currency. In periurban
regions, the rising prices of kerosene and other petroleum-based domestic fuels, coupled with the
economic knock-on effects of a current petro-boom, are making fuelwood a much more attractive alternative
as a domestic fuel choice. As lower and middle-income households shift away from commercial
petroleum-based energy sources in favour of cheaper and more readily available biomass alternatives, it
may be placing increased pressure on woodland resources and Kano’s surrounding rural ecology: in the
hinterlands of the city, local perceptions of research informants suggest that deteriorating economic conditions
have driven some individuals to ‘step up’ fuelwood production to meet rising peri-urban demands.
Although the intention of the paper is not to perpetuate crisis narratives or to suggest that fuelwood
demand is causing runaway deforestation, the evidence presented does suggest that as conventional
fuels become progressively more expensive, the poorest and most disadvantaged households may find it
increasingly challenging to meet their basic energy needs.

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