2006
DOI: 10.1016/j.enpol.2005.10.011
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Changing energy profiles and consumption patterns following electrification in five rural villages, South Africa

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Cited by 112 publications
(82 citation statements)
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References 26 publications
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“…Our findings of patterns of firewood use mainly for cooking and heating, despite the availability of alternative energy methods, are in line with findings from Madubansi and Shackleton (2006) in the Bushbuckridge area further north along the Lebombo Mountain range in South Africa.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 78%
“…Our findings of patterns of firewood use mainly for cooking and heating, despite the availability of alternative energy methods, are in line with findings from Madubansi and Shackleton (2006) in the Bushbuckridge area further north along the Lebombo Mountain range in South Africa.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 78%
“…Despite South African state efforts to protect and manage conservation landscapes, the legalistic and management frameworks put into place have not necessarily led to a decline in local community reliance on natural resources harvesting both within and outside of protected areas. 13 In some respects, consumptive resource reliance is increasingly pronounced in financially poor rural areas and includes local vulnerability reduction strategies such as collecting fuelwood for heating and cooking, with estimates of reliance on fuelwood as a primary energy source as high as 92% in Bushbuckridge (a town in the province of Mpumalanga) 14 , and up to 76% in rural Eastern Cape 15 . Harvesting of wild 'edibles' including marula fruits 16 , mopane worms and bushmeat 17 , is also commonplace.…”
Section: Protected Areas and Natural Resource Harvestingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Demand-side methodologies have also shed light into rural offgrid energy transitions at the household and village level, finding them to be better explained by 'energy stacking' or 'energy webs' (where households use different energy sources for the same or multiple purposes) rather than linear transitions [11][12] [13]. In South Africa, research regarding appliance ownership and grid-electricity access and demand also demonstrated that ownership of electric appliances did not necessarily mean that they were used, or that if they were used, that they were powered by the grid (or in other places, by solar home systems) [8] [14].…”
Section: Demand Side Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%