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NITI Aayog is laying out a ‘Roadmap for Access to Clean Cooking Energy in India’, in collaboration with the Council on Energy, Environment and Water (CEEW) and Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH.
The Roadmap synthesises the discussions that took place among about 30 key stakeholders in the clean cooking energy ecosystem in India. It also includes an extensive literature review of existing challenges in policy and implementation across all fuels and technologies.
The debates, discussions and policy targets on cooking energy access in India need to now go beyond LPG connections. The narrative must evolve towards the provision of affordable, accessible, safe and convenient use of clean cooking energy in a sustained manner.
7 mar 2024 · NEW DELHI, March 7 (Reuters) - India will extend a subsidy on cooking gas by a year at a cost of 120 billion rupees ($1.45 billion), the country's commerce minister said on Thursday, weeks...
Despite the rapid uptake of LPG for cooking, approximately 500 million people in India remain without access to clean cooking fuel. These households are using biomass or kerosene for cooking, both of which cause harmful indoor air pollution.
The Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas in the Government of India being aware of the health hazards and climate change set up the Energy Transition Task Force to look at the important issue of a transition to affordable and clean energy for all its citizens.
10 sie 2021 · NEW DELHI, Aug 10 (Reuters) - India has relaxed the rules of a scheme to provide easy access to cooking gas that will benefit millions more poor people, Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced...