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The Philippines is listed among the top 10 countries with the largest populations lacking access to clean cooking fuel and technologies. The slow progress in deploying clean cooking solutions in the Philippines highlights the need for specific interventions to address the gaps at the country level.
The 2020 SDG 7 tracking report estimates access to clean cooking in the Philippines at 46% of its 2018 population with rural areas lagging at 27%. This leaves some 54% or about 57.6 million people relying on traditional cement cookstoves and utilizing charcoal or fuelwood as cooking fuel.
Based on a study of household cooking practices in the Philippines, this publication provides insights and recommendations to encourage clean cooking in the country. The findings identify policy, information, technology, and financing gaps that must be addressed to boost the development and market expansion of clean cooking technologies.
Under WHO guidelines, kerosene is excluded from clean cooking fuels. Access to clean fuels and technologies for cooking (% of population) in Philippines was reported at 59.1 % in 2022, according to the World Bank collection of development indicators, compiled from officially recognized sources.
24 sty 2024 · Trade Barriers. Last published date: 2024-01-24. The Philippines maintains a two-tiered tariff policy for sensitive agricultural products, including rice, corn, pork, chicken meat, sugar, and coffee.
11 sty 2022 · The goal of this undertaking is to determine the economic effects brought about by free-trading policies between the Philippines and the six (6) main member states of the ASEAN re gion.
Access to clean fuels and technologies for cooking, rural (% of rural population) - Philippines IEA, IRENA, UNSD, World Bank, WHO. 2023. Tracking SDG 7: The Energy Progress Report.