Uganda Martyrs University Library Uganda Martyrs University
Archbishop Kiwanuka Memorial Library
  • Home
  • Contact us
    • Our Team
    • About
    • Ask a Librarian
  • Services
    • Library Catalogue
    • Online Journals
    • Past papers
    • Reading lists
    • Newspaper Index
    • Open Access Resources
  • Identify Me
  • Research
    • Staff publications
    • Student dissertations
    • Institutional repository
  • Website

Library Catalog

Find books, articles, CDs, DVDs and more...



Advanced Search | Browse By Subject

Online resources

Find, articles, journals...

  • Student dissertations
  • Institutional repository
  • Website
  • Home
  • Publication

Embodied Energy of Low Income Rural Housing in Uganda(Journal Article)

Embodied energy is an important consideration in discussions related to the sustainability of the construction sector. As part of this dialogue, this paper presents a developing country context of how these can values of energy for construction. The study investigated different housing sizes and typologies. Data collected from various embodied energy databases was the basis of an initial investigation, followed by serve to enable a transition in energy related discourse. In East Africa, the energy related discourse is largely concerned with the reduction in the use of wood fuel, which is the predominant energy source for cooking, with little attention to the an in depth exploration of values for specific building materials used in a typical rural building, with two materials, fired clay bricks, and cement standing out. The investigation of the fired clay bricks current and future impact of the buildings themselves, that is, lifetime energy consumption. The primary goal of this study was to determine the embodied energy (EE) of low-income tropical housing to better appreciate the relative suggested slightly lower embodied energy values that found in the literature, although it is evident that the sources of energy used for the processing of the bricks is of concern for embodied carbon.

Authoured by: Thomas Niwamara , Alex Ndibwami , Mark Olweny

Academic units: Faculty of The Built Environment


View

Back to Top

© 2015 Uganda Martyrs University Library