Journal of Food Security. 2013, 1(2), 49-51
DOI: 10.12691/JFS-1-2-6
Commentary

Fuelwood Supply: A Missed Essential Component in a Food Security Equation

Stephy D. Makungwa1, 2, , Francis Epulani3 and Iain H. Woodhouse1

1School of GeoSciences The University of Edinburgh, Drummond Street, Edinburgh, EH8 9XP, UK

2Bunda College of Agriculture, Lilongwe University of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Lilongwe, Malawi

3Management Environment and Development (MEAD) Consulting Group, Lilongwe Malawi

Pub. Date: November 26, 2013

Cite this paper

Stephy D. Makungwa, Francis Epulani and Iain H. Woodhouse. Fuelwood Supply: A Missed Essential Component in a Food Security Equation. Journal of Food Security. 2013; 1(2):49-51. doi: 10.12691/JFS-1-2-6

Abstract

The current definition of food security neglects to explicitly account for the fact that most staple foods in many developing countries need to be cooked before they are edible. Because of this deficiency, household access and availability to cooking energy is not considered in many food security projects and programmes. In this paper we synthesize existing documents to promote explicit inclusion of cooking energy as a fundamental component in a food security equation. The synthesis showed that as fuelwood becomes scarce households adapt their cooking styles by omitting or substituting some essential energy-demanding dishes (e.g. dry beans) in order to save cooking energy. As a consequence, household members are denied essential nutrients supplied by the ingestion of such dishes, thereby compromising their nutritional well-being. We argue that when food is sufficiently available, fuelwood shortage may prevent households in poor countries from bringing about important improvements in their nutritional well-being. We therefore recommend to explicitly add cooking energy as a fundamental component of any food security project or programme.

Keywords

cooking energy, dietary energy intake, food security, fuelwood supply, Malawi

Copyright

Creative CommonsThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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