A large section of rural households in India (43.24 % i.e. 7.2 crore households & 30 crore population) still depend on kerosene as their main/only source of lighting. Majority of these households belong to villages which are technically electrified.
There are millions of school-going children living in semi-rural and rural areas, who don’t have access to a clean and safe light which can help them study after sundown.
En-Light a Girl Child intervenes by provisioning girl students, especially from grades 6-12, with battery operated LED lamps which they can use instead of noxious and hazardous kerosene lamps to study after sundown, giving them more flexibility with allocating time for chores and homework, and more motivation to complete their schoolwork by underscoring its importance through a personal asset exclusively for educational purposes.
YOU can also help girls acquire the education they need to achieve their dreams through small interventions and acts of everyday heroism by changing the attitude of your community toward girls’ education, marriage and childbearing. Share your ideas with us using the hashtag #enlightagirlchild ! We are curating tweets, Facebook and Tumblr posts, Instagram images, and more!
Support En-Light a Girl Child by spreading the word. Visit us at http://www.enlightagirlchild.com/
Visit our Facebook Page at https://www.facebook.com/enlightgirlchild to learn more about our hashtag campaign!
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Girls' Education and India's Electricity Crisis: Innovative Interventiona by Non-Profits
1. 43%57%
Percentage of Kerosene Lit
Rural Households in India
Percentage of Kerosene lit
Rural HH
% of HH using electricity &
other sources
1. POWER CRISIS IN INDIA
A large section of rural households in India (43.24 % i.e. 7.2 crore
households & 30 crore population) still depend on kerosene as their
main/only source of lighting. Majority of these households belong to
villages which are technically electrified.
There are millions of school-going children living in semi-rural and
rural areas, who don’t have access to a clean and safe light which can
help them study after sundown.
Problems Faced
1. Extensive use of kerosene lamps/candles: Majority of households depend on kerosene for
lighting and the children study using these lamps which provide very dim and insufficient light in
terms of illumination. The lamps put strain on the children’s eyes, emit smoke and give the children
eye problems.
2. Increasing Poverty: A rural household in India spends a substantial part of their income on
kerosene fuel for lighting. The average monthly household expenditure on kerosene is as high as Rs.
100 per lamp
(Rs. 1200/yr). The fuel prices are increasing and are available mainly in black market at a much
higher price.
3. Health Hazards: As the children are regularly exposed to kerosene lamps, the soot and toxic fumes
emitted cause health problems like irritation in the eyes, severe respiratory illness (lung and throat
cancers) and cataract to name a few.
4. Fires & Burns: The number of victims of fire accidents and burn
injuries due to use of kerosene lamps run into millions in India.
5. Government Expenditure: Government provides kerosene by
importing oil which drains valuable hard currency. The escalating
costs of providing fuel drain money away from primary needs like
food, health services, housing, drinking water etc.
6. Environmental Degradation: Burning of billions of liter of fossil
fuels increase global warming. It’s also reducing the available fossil
fuel on the planet.
Summary : Households with kerosene as the only/ main source of Lighting
Country/States Households
(Crore)
Households
(%)
India 7.3 43. 24%
Orissa > 2 63 %
West Bengal, Uttar Pradesh, Assam, Jharkhand, Bihar 5.4 58 % - 89%
Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh 1.2 27 % - 41 %
2. Map of Percentage of Households in India with
Kerosene as Main / Only Source of Lighting
Sr.
No
States & UTs No. of Kerosene Lit Rural
Households
Approx. Affected
Population
(Crore)
1 Uttar Pradesh 19111021 11.60
2 Bihar 14963756 8.22
3 West Bengal 7927731 3.61
4 Orissa 5113827 2.20
5 Madhya Pradesh 4546696 2.21
6 Assam 3782653 1.85
7 Rajasthan 3729431 2.03
8 Jharkhand 3113279 1.66
9 Maharashtra 3107049 1.47
10 Andhra Pradesh 1450876 0.58
11 Chattisgarh 1235592 0.56
12 Karnataka 965641 0.45
13 Gujarat 869255 0.43
14 Tamil Nadu 791493 0.31
15 Haryana 335860 0.18
16 Uttarakhand 204149 0.10
4. 2. STATE OF GIRL CHILD IN INDIA
The United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN-DESA) named India as the
most dangerous place in the world for a girl child in 2012. The female infant mortality rate in India
is 97 for every 100 male infant deaths as compared to 122 male infant deaths for every 100 female infant
deaths in the developing world as a whole. An Indian girl child aged 1- 5 years is 75% more likely to die
than an Indian boy, making this the worst gender differential in child mortality for any country in the
world.
In India amidst the uproar for gender sensitization and gender equality, the never ending pathos of girl
child is still very much a deep concern. Their plight could be traced through various manifestations like
the declining sex-ratio, social stigma, child marriage, child marriage, and child labor. The preference for
male child is amongst the many disillusioned factors that are commonly prevalent amongst the poor,
uneducated people from rural areas, which discourage families to have girl children. Male child is seen as
bread winners or carrier of generations, whereas women are seen as vulnerable and a cost, emotional
and pecuniary both to the families.
A long and sustained crusade against discrimination and simultaneous upliftment of the girl child through
education, awareness and better opportunities for living is the need of the hour.
STATE OF GIRL CHILD IN INDIA
Child Sex Ratio (no. of females per 1000 males in the age group of 0 – 6 yrs) : 919
More than 50% of girls fail to enroll in school; those that do are likely to drop out by the age of 12.
Dropout rates increase alarmingly in class III to V, its 58% for girls.
53% of girls in the age group of 5 to 9 years are illiterate.
Average enrolment rate of girls aged 14-18 is only 36.77%.
61.5% of girls drop out of school before completing class XII.
Amongst married women in India today, 75% were under age at the time of their marriages
India accounts for the termination of some 1 crore female fetuses over the past 20 years.
Of the 12 million girls born in India, 1 million do not see their 1st birthday and 3 million do not see
their 15th birthday
Every sixth girl child's death is due to gender discrimination.
Female mortality exceeds male mortality in 224 out of 402 districts in India.
1 out of 4 girls is sexually abused before the age of 4.
More than 100 million girl children between the ages of 5 and 17 are engaged in child labour
Death rate among girls below the age of 4 years is higher than that of boys. Even if she escapes
infanticide or foeticide, a girl child is less likely to receive immunization, nutrition or medical
treatment compared to a male child.
There are approximately 2 million child commercial sex workers between the age of 5 and 15
years and about 3.3 million between 15 and 18 years; forming 40% of the total population of
commercial sex workers in India; 71% of them are illiterate; 500,000 children are forced into this
trade every year.
5. 3. REFERENCES
1. Houselisting and Housing Census Data Tables - District Level,
http://www.censusindia.gov.in/2011census/hlo/District_Tables/HLO_District_Tables.html
2. India: Source of lighting:
http://www.devinfolive.info/censusinfodashboard/website/index.php/pages/source_lightin
g/total/kerosene/IND
2. Statistics of Underprivileged Children in India
http://america.cry.org/site/know_us/cry_america_and_child_rights/statistics_underprivilege
d_chi.html
4. Situation of Girl Child in India
http://www.betifoundation.org/situation-of-girl-child-in-india
5. India deadliest place in world for girl child
http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2012-02-01/india/31012468_1_child-mortality-
infant-mortality-infant-deaths
6. CHILD Protection & Child Rights » Vulnerable Children » Children's Issues » Girl Child
http://www.childlineindia.org.in/girl-child-rights-protection.htm
7. Status of children in India
http://infochangeindia.org/agenda/child-rights-in-india/status-of-children-in-india.html