THE ECONOMICS OF RURAL ENERGY USE IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES CHAKRAVORTY

20.500.12592/dpc64f

THE ECONOMICS OF RURAL ENERGY USE IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES CHAKRAVORTY

25 May 2022

India tried to go down the same road and by the end of 1998 had almost 2.8 million plants in operation, which increased to roughly 5 million by 2020 [Jaganmohan, 2022] Bhatia [1990] develops a case study for the promotion of biogas in India and finds that the main hurdle preventing the adoption by farmers is the unfavourable macroeconomic environment created by the government and inappropriate pri. [...] As mentioned above, in India the cost of a cylinder alone, without accounting for the burner and the piping, represents a major share of the monthly budget of most rural households. [...] A second treatment added further information on the amount of subsidy that could be provided to the households for purchase of LPG and hence the residual amount of monthly expenditure on LPG to be incurred by the household. [...] Since April 2018, the government has stopped withholding the transfer of the subsidy money to the bank account of the PMUY beneficiaries to encourage them to increase their LPG consumption. [...] The amount of the refills is credited in advance into the bank account of the PMUY beneficiaries.

Authors

girard

Pages
37
Published in
Canada