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Call for Applications: USAID Promoting Alternative Technologies & Fuels to Reduce the Use of Charcoal for Cooking (Congo DR)

Call for Applications: USAID Promoting Alternative Technologies & Fuels to Reduce the Use of Charcoal for Cooking (Congo DR)

Deadline: 27-Jan-2025

The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Central Africa Regional Program for the Environment (CARPE) is seeking applications for a cooperative agreement from qualified entities to implement the USAID/CARPE Promoting Alternative Technologies and Fuels to Reduce the Use of Charcoal for Cooking in the Democratic Republic of the Congo Activity.

The objective of the USAID Promoting Alternative Technologies and Fuels to Reduce the Use of Charcoal for Cooking in the Democratic Republic of the Congo activity is to reduce deforestation and forest degradation by reducing the amount of charcoal that is used for cooking.

In the metropolitan area of Kinshasa there are around 17 million inhabitants (2021). Approximately 97% of the population uses charcoal for cooking (to different levels and frequency), while only 12% of households use improved cookstoves. On average, a household uses 0.346 kg of charcoal and 0.016 kg of fuelwood daily in Kinshasa, which equates to 9.8 to 13.4 million tons of wood used annually. According to Centre de Coopération Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement, Kinshasa alone consumes around 18 million tons of charcoal annually. In the North Kivu city of Goma, there are around 2 million inhabitants (2022) and only 4.1% have access to electricity. Around 80% of Goma households use charcoal and firewood as the primary fuels for cooking. Because of the high-level use of charcoal for cooking in urban areas such as Kinshasa and Goma, it is important to address charcoal use as a key way to reduce deforestation and forest degradation.

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