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Interfuel substitution and changes in the way households use energy : the case of cooking and lighting behavior in urban Java (English)

A major shortcoming of standard methods for estimating household fuel demand as a function of fuel choice is that, for cooking, end-use services are treated as constant, while not taking into account behavioral changes that accompany interfuel substitution. For lighting, the amount of electricity required to displace kerosene is often estimated on the basis of assumptions about unmet lighting demand in households lighting with kerosene. This paper...
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Fitzgerald,Kevin B.; Barnes,Douglas French; McGranahan, Gordon.

Interfuel substitution and changes in the way households use energy : the case of cooking and lighting behavior in urban Java (English). Industry and Energy Department working paper. Energy series paper ; no. 29 Washington, D.C. : World Bank Group. http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/550711468766173507

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