The National Strategy for Clean Cooking Energy (2024-2034) Launched by the President of the United Republic of Tanzania.
- Category: News
- Published: Wednesday, 15 May 2024 15:06
- Written by Elvis
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TaTEDO SESO organization participated in the launching event of the ten-year National Strategy for Clean Cooking Energy. The event was conducted at Mwalimu Julius Nyerere Conference Hall on the 8th of May 2024. The purpose of the event was to officially initiate the use of the National Strategy for Clean Cooking Energy (2024-2034).
The government is poised to implement a raft of measures, one of them being the imminent declaration of a comprehensive prohibition on the utilization of non-renewable fuels in institutions with cooking for more than 100 individuals.
The government will also work with members of the private sector to come up with ways of lowering the cost of cooking gas cylinders and simplifying the refilling process for people in rural areas.
With the launch of the ten-year National Strategy for Clean Cooking Energy (NSCCE, 2024-2034), President Samia Suluhu Hassan also directed officials from the Energy and Finance ministries to sit down with members of the private sector and other stakeholders to deliberate on where and how to source funds that will be spent on subsidizing cooking gas and the cylinders.
“We need a special fund for clean cooking energy solutions. This is what we will talk about in a meeting in Paris, France,” said President Samia Suluhu Hassan as she graced the launch of the strategy, whose implementation will cost a staggering TZS 4.6 trillion (about $1.8 billion) in the coming ten years.
The TZS 4.6 trillion strategy envisions raising the population of Tanzanian households that use clean cooking energy from the current ten percent to 80 percent by the year 2034.
President insisted that the Ministry of State in the President’s Office (Regional Administration and Local Government Authorities) (PO-RALG), should come up with a modality through which the use of clean energy will be one of the Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) for officials at the district and grassroots levels.
In three months from now, the President said, government officials will have to deliver a comprehensive progress report on the implementation of the various directives on the subject matter, including one that compels institutions that feed over 100 people at any given time to shift from the use of firewood and charcoal to the use of clean cooking solutions.
“The use of clean cooking energy is no longer a luxurious thing. It is a necessity,” said the President.
Despite being largely considered to be cheaper options, charcoal, firewood, and crop residues were having profoundly detrimental impacts on people’s health, causing up to 33,000 deaths annually, according to data from the Energy Ministry of Energy of Tanzania.
Data produced in 2022 by the Energy Ministry of Energy shows that a person who is exposed to indoor smoke inhaling from firewood for an hour has similar health risks as a person who smokes between 200 and 300 cigarettes.
The preparation of the strategy was in line with the directives the President made during the 2022 Clean Energy Conference.
Speaking at the same event, the Minister of State in the Vice President’s Office (Union and Environment), Mr. Selemani Jafo, said it is now being estimated that Tanzania was losing about 469,000 hectares of its forests each year due to the cutting down of trees for charcoal and firewood.
The Prime Minister, Mr. Kassim Majaliwa, also said all key players were involved in the preparation of the strategy in a joint effort to reduce the use of firewood, charcoal, and crop residues as cooking energy.
He said the NSCCE strategy, which will need a total of Sh4.6 trillion to implement, involves the inputs of all key players in the cooking energy sector.
He said since 2022, several steps have been taken, including restricting some public institutions, such as prisons and schools, from using dirty energy.
In her remarks, the Speaker of Parliament, Dr Tulia Ackson, commended the President for the steps her government is taking to use clean cooking energy solutions, which will translate into better health for women and girls.
“When we talk of health and its connection with dirty cooking energy, we are talking of the entire burden that a woman faces in her daily responsibilities, promising that the Parliament would work hand in hand with the government in all matters that seek to elevate the economic conditions of Tanzanians.