Polluting cooking fuels as well as cars contribute to the poor air quality.
Not exact matches
There were scattered examples of progress on clean
cooking, particularly in Indonesia which achieved promising gains by rolling out strategies using liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) as a clean
cooking «transition»
fuel in place of high -
polluting fuels like charcoal.
Many of the world's cities are suffering from the concentrated use of energy services that emit air pollution, in particular from transport (but also industry, power generation etc.), while many of the poorest rural communities are particularly exposed to toxic fumes as they use
polluting solid
fuels to
cook food and boil water.
Around 3 billion people
cook using
polluting open fires or simple stoves
fuelled by kerosene, biomass (wood, animal dung and crop waste) and coal.