An Assessment of the Contribution of Traditional Fish Smoking to Greenhouse Gas Emissions in Selected Communities of Coastal Ghana.
Loading...
Files
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Cape Coast
Abstract
The concentrations of greenhouse gases (GHGs) in the atmosphere were
relatively stable during the pre-industrial era by keeping the Earth‘s
temperature steady until the dawn of the industrial revolution when the
concentrations of these gases started increasing. Major sources of GHGs
include the combustion of fossilised fuels and the burning of biomass fuels.
Throughout the world, fuelwood is used for heating and cooking. The fish
smoking process is no exception. The study examined GHG emissions from
traditional fish smoking along the coast of the Western and Central Regions of
Ghana, investigating fuelwood consumption across different fishing seasons
and preferences for specific fuelwood types. An explorative sequential method
was employed as the study design, involving focus groups discussions and
interviews with fish smokers and fuelwood suppliers. A cross-sectional survey
was conducted from May to October 2022, sampling 506 respondents. The
estimation of CO2, CH4 and N2O emissions was done using the IPCC tier 1
methodology for stationary combustion, supplemented by air quality sensor
measurement. Results show that the total quantity of fuelwood used by the
communities in the study was 18,349 MT per annum. The cumulative annual
of emissions resulting from the practice of fish smoking amounts to 33,871.88
MT of CO2e. The study found that fish smoking comparatively emits lower
GHGs compared to other sources with fuelwood preferences influenced by
factors such as aesthetics, burning duration, and local availability. It was
therefore recommended that measuring GHG emissions from other fuelwooddependent
activities in Ghana would enhance emission calculations and
accuracy.
Description
xiv,205p:ill
