Every evening across Africa and the Middle East, millions of families gather around open fires and inefficient stoves to prepare their meals. The smoke that fills their homes poses a deadly threat, claiming hundreds of thousands of lives every year.
This daily exposure to toxic fumes represents one of the largest overlooked public health crises in both regions. Expanding access to clean cooking solutions could prevent these deaths while transforming lives in ways that extend far beyond health.
The Daily Danger Facing Billions of People
The numbers tell a sobering story. Globally, around 2.1 billion people cook with polluting fuels and technologies that consume their homes with dangerous smoke and particulates. In Africa and the Middle East, this widespread reliance on traditional cooking methods harms people across both regions.
Researchers have found that a lack of access to clean cooking leads to 815,000 premature deaths annually across Africa alone. As a leading cause of preventable mortality, household air pollution ranks among the top risk factors for death and disease in the region.
Because they typically spend the most time near cooking fires, women and children especially face the greatest exposure while breathing in harmful pollutants hour after hour. Day after day, this repeated exposure accumulates and intensifies the health risks.
How Unclean Cooking Directly Impacts Health
Immediate smoke inhalation during cooking is just the beginning of the health toll. Over time, traditional fuels release carbon monoxide, particulate matter and carcinogenic compounds that damage the lungs, heart and blood vessels. When exposure becomes prolonged, it can lead to heart disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, lung cancer and stroke.
Even after the cooking fire goes out, the dangers persist. Fine ash particles left behind from burning wood, charcoal and other solid fuels can cause an asthma attack or trigger other severe respiratory conditions when inhaled. Lightly misting ash with water can help decrease the amount in the air, but it’s essential not to add too much water, as it can make the ash heavier and, therefore, harder to move.
Building up in homes over time, these cancer-causing residues can continue harming everyone in the household long after families finish cooking.
The Far-Reaching Impacts of Energy Poverty
Health represents only one dimension of the damage. Throughout the region, energy poverty affects economic development, gender equality and environmental sustainability.
An Unseen Burden on Women and Girls
In many communities, women and girls shoulder the responsibility for both fuel collection and cooking with inefficient stoves. Research shows that women in fuel-scarce areas can spend almost 24 hours per week gathering firewood and other biomass for cooking.
This prevents women from pursuing education, income-generating activities and community participation. To help collect fuel or care for younger siblings while their mothers cook, girls often miss school.
Breaking this cycle requires providing families with cooking solutions that do not demand hours of daily fuel gathering and allowing women to pursue opportunities beyond survival. The economic cost of this lost productivity affects entire communities and slows regional development.
A Growing Toll on the Environment
The environmental consequences compound the human cost. For their daily cooking needs, millions of families depend on wood and charcoal while placing enormous pressure on regional forests and natural ecosystems.
In developing countries, the increasing demand worsens deforestation and accelerates habitat loss while contributing to climate change. The resulting degradation creates a feedback loop where communities lose both the fuel sources they depend on and the ecosystems that support their livelihoods.
An Economic Strain on Healthcare Systems
Beyond the individual suffering, this public health crisis places a heavy burden on national healthcare systems. Treating the millions of cases of chronic respiratory and cardiovascular disease caused by household air pollution consumes significant financial resources, diverting funds that could otherwise be invested in preventive care and other development priorities.
The Turning Point on Clean Cooking Has Arrived
Across multiple sectors, governments, international organizations and the private sector are changing how they approach this challenge. Rather than a secondary concern, clean cooking access has gained recognition as an essential development priority. As the true scale of the crisis becomes clear, momentum is building.
New Waves of Investment and Policy
Growing recognition of the problem’s urgency has triggered major financial commitments. The World Bank even mobilized around $562 million in investment to support household energy programs across multiple countries.
Governments throughout the region are also implementing policies to accelerate the transition. Subsidy programs for cookstoves, regulations on fuel quality, public awareness campaigns and infrastructure investments to make cleaner fuels more accessible in rural and underserved areas all form part of this policy push.
Several nations have set ambitious targets for the next decade. For instance, Tanzania launched a national strategy to reach 80% household adoption by 2034.
Innovating for a Cleaner Future
Choosing the right technology makes all the difference. Because success requires approaches tailored to local needs, preferences and economic realities, the development of clean cooking technologies cannot follow a one-size-fits-all model. To work across diverse communities, successful solutions must be affordable, culturally appropriate, durable and backed by reliable supply chains.
Among the most promising innovations are improved biomass stoves that burn fuel more efficiently, liquefied petroleum gas systems, electric cooking appliances that leverage expanding grid access and biogas systems that convert organic waste into cooking fuel. Scaling distribution while ensuring communities have access to repair services and fuel supplies remains the central challenge.
How You Can Be Part of a Healthier Future
You can help accelerate progress on this critical issue by supporting international organizations working to expand clean energy access in underserved communities. Using your voice to advocate for stronger climate and health policies can especially encourage governments to prioritize household energy initiatives.
Share information to raise awareness among your networks. The more people understand how cooking methods affect health, gender equality and environmental stability, the harder it becomes for policymakers to ignore the issue.
If you work in development, public health or environmental sectors, consider how your organization might integrate cleaner cooking solutions into existing programs. Many projects addressing poverty, healthcare or deforestation can incorporate this dimension without requiring entirely new frameworks. When more people recognize the issue as a crucial development priority, the political will to solve it grows stronger.
Accelerating Progress for a Healthier World
Expanding access to clean cooking offers a comprehensive pathway to regional transformation. It prevents hundreds of thousands of premature deaths, empowers women and girls, protects vital ecosystems and strengthens significant economic resilience across Africa and the Middle East. With sustained investment, technological innovation and global commitment, solutions are within reach.
