In South Sudan, over 99% of households utilize traditional charcoal and wood fuels for cooking and the vast majority of cooking is on indoor unvented and unimproved cookstoves or over open flames. This results in high levels of household air pollution (HAP), which can lead to serious respiratory illness and death, especially for women and young children (over 4400 HAP related deaths of children under 5 in South Sudan in 2016). Traditional cooking also perpetuates gender inequalities by placing extreme time and physical burden on women diminishing quality of life and opportunities for education and income. Socioeconomic impacts are also seen from fuel expenses which can limit available income for other expenses like education and food. Finally, these fuels can also lead to significant environmental impacts from land degradation and climate change. All of this heightens the vulnerability of developing communities and exacerbates the humanitarian and development challenges they face.
Grant ID
HGC-POC-2111-49660
Show on Hub
On
Show on Spoke
Off
Follow-on Funding
Off
Lead Funding Organization
Challenge
Initiatives
Principal Investigator
Award Manager
Individual Funder Information
Funding Amount (in original currency)
249998.00
Funding Currency
CAD
Exchange Rate (at time of payment)
0.7500000000
Funding Amount (in USD)
187499.00
Project Type
Project Primary Sector
Funding Date Range
-
Funding Total (In US dollars)
187498.50
Co-Funded
False