The socio-ecology of firewood and charcoal on the Freetown peninsula
- 1 October 1987
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Africa
- Vol. 57 (4) , 457-497
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1159894
Abstract
Opening Paragraph In a country which in the last 200 years has undergone continuous and often momentous political, economic and social changes, few things are capable of conveying as strong an impression of stability and changelessness as wood fuel (charcoal and firewood) consumption and production; and nowhere is this more striking than on the Freetown or Western Area (formerly Colony) peninsula. In this region, which has always accounted for the major share of national electricity, kerosene and cooking gas (LPG) consumption, not only is current percentage household firewood consumption only fractionally lower than in the nineteenth century but a much higher proportion of households consume charcoal now than at any time in the last two centuries (Cline-Cole, 1984a). Today firewood and charcoal combined supply a minimum of 80 per cent of total peninsula energy demand for both domestic and non-household uses (Davidson, 1985). Freetown's firewood consumption also represents some 10 per cent of the national total (Atlanta, 1979).Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Residence at Sierra LeonePublished by Taylor & Francis ,2014
- Third world cities and the environment of povertyGeoforum, 1984
- Towards an understanding of man-firewood relations in Freetown (Sierra Leone)Geoforum, 1984
- Managing energy emergenciesGeoforum, 1983
- RAINFALL IN SIERRA LEONESingapore Journal of Tropical Geography, 1980
- toward a perceptual model of folk biological classification1American Ethnologist, 1976
- The Raised Beaches of the Peninsula Area of Sierra LeoneTransactions and Papers (Institute of British Geographers), 1962
- West African Forests and ForestryThe Geographical Journal, 1921
- A Transformed Colony: Sierra Leone as It Was and as It IsThe Geographical Journal, 1910
- Sierra Leone after a hundred yearsPublished by Smithsonian Institution ,1894