Type of Fuel Used by Households HECS Highlights SR - 1995

Reference Number: 

1995

Release Date: 

Saturday, January 15, 2005


Eight out of ten households using electricity

  • The 1995 HECS results showed that 83.9 percent of the 12.8 million households were using electricity for fuel. Note that for the 1995 HECS, dry cell batteries used in flashlights and radios are included under the category of electricity.

Almost all households in the NCR were using electricity

  • The National Capital Region (NCR) was the lead region among electricity users. Almost all (98.6%) of its 1.8 million households reported using electricity, Region III, followed with 94.0 percent.
  • Region VII had the lowest proportion (68.2%) of households using electricity.

Kerosene and fuelwood next popular energy sources

  • Kerosene and fuelwood also posted high proportion of users, with 79.9 percent and 63.5 percent, respectively. Biomass residue such as bagasse, coconut shell and husk, coconut midrib, etc. had the least users (29.2%).
  • Kerosene was widely used in Region VIII (98.0%); fuelwood in Region I (89.6%); charcoal in Region IX (46.8%) and LPG in NCR (67.7%).

Dry cell batteries were most common source of electricity

  • A total of 10,760 million households used electricity for energy. Of this number, 65.8 percent reported dry cell batteries as the source.
  • Households that consumed electricity from utilities like MERALCO comprised 29.4 percent of all households while that from electric cooperatives, 39.7 percent. Another 9.4 percent obtained electricity by tapping from neighboring households with electricity.

LPG and kerosene usually picked up from dealer/store

  • Liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) and kerosene, two other conventional form of energy source, were usually picked up from dealer/store, accounting for 90.9 percent for LPG and 96.7 percent for kerosene.
  • Only 8.8 percent of LPG users and 1.5 percent of kerosene users depended on delivery service.

Non-conventional types of fuel were self-collected/gathered

  • A large proportion of households gathered the fuelwood and biomass residues they used for household consumption, with 79.3 percent and 90.6 percent, respectively. Only 5.4 percent of the households purchased biomass residues and 16.0 percent for firewood.

For charcoal, a little less than three-fourths bought the item while 23.9 percent produced them for own-household consumption.

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