Opportunities for transition to clean household energy in Kenya
Application of the WHO Household Energy Assessment Rapid Tool (HEART)
Overview
Household air pollution (HAP) from inefficient
fuel combustion is one of the most important
global environmental health risks today. Almost
3 billion people, mainly in low- and middleincome countries, still rely on solid fuels (wood,
animal dung, charcoal, crop wastes and coal)
burnt in inefficient, highly polluting stoves for
cooking and heating.
Widespread use of polluting
cookstoves causes almost 4 million premature
deaths annually among children and adults from
respiratory illness, cardiovascular diseases and
cancer, as well as serious injuries from scalding,
burns and poisoning.1
The WHO guidelines for indoor air quality:
household fuel combustion (2014) provide
technical recommendations for policy-makers
and specialists working on energy, health,
environmental and other issues to ensure health
benefits from the clean energy transition.
In support of the implementation of the guidelines,
WHO has developed a tool, the Household Energy
Assessment Rapid Tool (HEART), to identify
relevant stakeholders, and map out a country's
policies and programmes on household energy
and/or related health impacts.
The tool is being
pilot-tested as a guide to conducting rapid
situational assessments of countries’ readiness
to address access to clean energy technologies.
It is used to gather and synthesize information
on household energy use and its public health
impacts and to stimulate an informed dialogue
on the impacts of household energy interventions,
shared responsibilities and coordinated actions,
country-specific barriers to implementation and
opportunities for the public health sector to
accelerate a transition to clean household energy.
The rapid assessments do not take the place of
the detailed economic evaluations required to
identify national energy priorities, national and
global work on mapping disease incidence nor
the social and political considerations required in
implementing major social interventions in public
health. They do provide a broad overview of the
current household energy and health situation,
identify key stakeholders and will ultimately
support intersectoral cooperation. This report
presents the results obtained with HEART in Kenya.