According to the World Health Organization, air pollution is “the single biggest environmental threat to human health.” The Global Burden of Disease study estimates that it is responsible for 7–9 million premature deaths annually, or 10-15% of all deaths. While these figures suggest air pollution is a pressing public health problem, existing research does not distinguish between temporary exposure to peak pollution and sustained exposure to ambient pollution. Addressing the former would require targeted reductions in peak exposures driven largely by private activities such as cooking and work, while addressing the latter would require correcting the significant negative externalities that drive poor ambient air quality. This paper sheds light on this distinction by studying the impacts of reducing one of the most notorious sources of peak air pollution— charcoal cooking—in an urban environment where ambient pollution is also quite high.

The authors conduct a field study in Nairobi, Kenya, in which they offer participants randomized access (through varying subsidies and credits) to improved cookstoves. The improved cookstove, called a Jikokoa, is energy efficient and uses less charcoal and emits less pollution than the types of cookstoves common among households in Nairobi. The authors follow up with study participants after 3.5 years of daily stove use to analyze their impacts on pollution and health.

To measure participants’ exposure to pollution, each participant wears a backpack containing two devices that record exposure to particulate matter and carbon monoxide on a minute-by-minute basis for 48 hours. Such high-frequency monitoring allows the authors to separately identify impacts on mean and peak pollution exposure. A complementary time use survey records each respondents’ indoor or outdoor activity during each of those 48 hours. To measure health, the authors use measurements of blood pressure and blood oxygen levels, and as well as individual characteristics including height and weight. Finally, the authors use a socio-economic survey to measure behavioral and financial impacts. They find the following:

  • The improved stove reduces peak emissions during cooking by 42%. For the control group (those who received smaller subsidies for their stoves), peak emissions while cooking are 125 micrograms per cubic meter (or, μg/ m3) higher than their median daily exposure, but improved stove ownership reduces this by 52μg/m3. Average exposure while cooking is 50 μg/m3 among the control group and 33 μg/m3 for the treatment group; for comparison, average exposure while not cooking is 36 μg/m3 for both groups.
  • These reductions in peak cooking emissions are largely offset by high levels of ambient pollution. Study participants report cooking for only two hours each day, on average, or 9% of their time. As a result, the large reductions in cooking pollution have only negligible impacts on participants’ overall exposure to pollution.
  • Adoption of the Jikokoa stove reduces selfreported respiratory symptoms such as sore throat, headache, cough, and runny nose. These are likely a direct result of reductions in peak emissions, and the authors find that these respiratory symptoms are correlated with peak levels of pollution, and not with average concentrations.
  • Despite these improvements, the authors find that adoption of the Jikokoa had no impact on an array of clinical, quantitative health measurements (including blood pressure and blood oxygen), medical diagnoses (including pneumonia), or health-related expenditures. In other words, against a backdrop of high ambient air pollution, the large reductions in peak cooking emissions appear to have had negligible impacts on long term indicators of health.
  • The $40 Jikokoa stove generates $86 in annual charcoal savings and reduces CO2 emissions at $4.9 per ton, suggesting government subsidies would generate large societal benefits.

These results suggest that the urban poor have only limited ability to improve their health through the private adoption of improved technologies. Instead, improving chronic and long-term health will depend on the reduction of ambient air pollution, which will require government intervention to address the negative pollution externality caused by economic activity. Despite this, these results support heavily subsidizing improved cookstove adoption as a cost-effective way of reducing carbon emissions.

Research Brief·Oct 27, 2023

Dictatorship, Higher Education and Social Mobility • Higher Education and Mortality: Legacies of an Authoritarian College Contraction • The Intergenerational Transmission of Higher Education: Evidence from the 1973 Coup in Chile

Maria Angélica Bautista, Felipe González, Luis Martínez, Pablo Muñoz, and Mounu Prem
Following the coup of 1973 that brought military dictatorship to Chile under Augusto Pinochet’s rule, enrollment in higher education fell (owing to reduced government spending), with negative effects on those missing out; Broadly, those who were affected experienced an increase...
Topics: Development Economics
Research Brief·May 26, 2023

Gang Rule: Understanding and Countering Criminal Governance

Christopher Blattman, Gustavo Duncan, Benjamin Lessing, and Santiago Tobón
Criminal organizations are pervasive. In many cities globally, gangs serve critical functions by enforcing social order and property rights, often despite the presence of strong governments. Such conditions present a puzzle to researchers and policymakers who expect gang activity to...
Topics: Development Economics
Research Brief·Oct 9, 2019

Spillover Impacts on Education from Employment Guarantees and Educational Investment Responses to Economic Opportunity: Evidence from Indian Road Construction

For most young people and their parents who live in high-income countries, the decision to attend school is an easy one. School is universally available and free through high school, schooling is mandatory through the age of 16, and most...
Topics: Early Childhood Education, Economic Mobility & Poverty, Employment & Wages, Health care, K-12 Education