Title
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Subtitle
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Author
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Instituition
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Journal/Publisher
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Date
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Outline
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General
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The Urban Household Energy Transition
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Social and Environmental Impacts in the Developing World
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Barnes, D.F. Krutilla, K. Hyde, W.
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World Bank (financed by)
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2004
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This book develops a comprehensive assessment of the evolution of residential fuel choice and consumption in urban areas in the developing world, and the effect of urban growth on periurban forest resources. Taken together, energy surveys and biomass data contained sufficiently wide variation in urban fuel choice and consumption patterns, local resource conditions, and energy policy regimes to enable an assessment of the factors underlying the evolution of urban fuel utilization and forest resources. By comparing the patterns of energy use of a large number of cities, the auithors were able to distill a comprehensive picture of both the diversity underlying the energy transition and the fundamental principles applying across cases.
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Energy, Economic growth and causality in developing countries
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A case study of Tanzania and Nigeria
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Ebohon, O.J.
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Energy Policy, Vol. 24 (1996), No. 5, pp. 447-453
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1996
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The article examines the causal directions between energy consumption and economic growth for Nigeria and Tanzania. The results show a simultaneous causal relationship between energy and economic growth for both countries.
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The flicker of a brighter future
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Business in Africa
|
Economist
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Economist
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2006
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The article gives reasons for investors to occupy in Africa.
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Helping Africa help itself
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Economist
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Economist
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2005
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The article assesses financial aid to African countries by the industrial nations
|
World Energy Outlook and Development 2004
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IEA
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IEA
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2004
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The report offers a mass of statistical information, informed projections and focused energy analysis. It does not pretend to solve the problems, but it provides the indispensable information from which solutions will eventually be crafted.
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Energy balances of non-OECD countries 2003-2004
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IEA
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IEA
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2006
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This publication provides statistics on production, trade and consumption in a common unit for each source of energy in more than 100 non-OECD countries and main regions including world.
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Energy and Poverty
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Lamech, R. O'Sullivan, K.
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World Bank
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PRSP Sourcebook
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Following a brief review of some facts about energy and the poor, the article discusses the demand of households and business for energy. Then, it presents an energy–poverty framework and suggests five energy development goals to focus energy–poverty diagnosis and policy formulation. The impact on poverty reduction of progress in achieving the five energy development goals is discussed, and indicators are defined to establish baselines and monitor progress. Finally, outlines policies and programs that may be adopted to achieve these energy development goals are presented.
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Ending Africa's poverty trap
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Sachs, J.D. et al.
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UN Millennium Project (cooperation)
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|
2004
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This paper outlines a theory of Africa’s poverty trap and the structural conditions and history that led to it. It identifes how key public investments could enable well-governed African countries to meet the United Nations’ Millennium Development Goals and thereby begin to extricate themselves from the trap. It outlines the specific sets of investments needed to achieve these goals in three African countries, and it estimates the corresponding financial costs. The authors also propose a new operational framework through which the international community could help African countries make the needed investments.
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Wofür das Ganze?
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Grill, B.
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Die Zeit, No. 3 (2007)
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2007
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The article summarizes 50 years of development aid by industrialized countries and gives a pessimistic outlook.
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Boom ohne die Deutschen
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Asche, H.
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Die Zeit, No. 6 (2007)
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2007
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The article explains the thesis that German firms' reservations towards investments in Africa is a huge mistake.
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General > Household Economics
General > Growth
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Infrastructure and Growth in Developing Countries
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Recent Advances and Research Challenges
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Straub, S.
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World Bank
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Policy Research Working Paper 4460
|
2008
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This paper presents a survey of recent research on the economics of infrastructure in developing countries. Energy, transport, telecommunications, water and sanitation are considered. The survey covers two main set of issues: the linkages between infrastructure and economic growth (at the economy-wide, regional and sectoral level) and the composition, sequencing and efficiency of alternative infrastructure investments.
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Lightning Energy
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Improved Designs for Solar Rechargeable Lanterns
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Development and Marketing in Development Countries
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Crawley, K. Holland, R. Gitonga, S.
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|
Journal of Energy in South Africa, Vol. 11 (2000), No. 4
|
2000/11
|
This paper describes the process of market research and the trade-offs during product development and testing to produce a lantern that is affordable and reliable. The requirements of the battery, panel, charge regulator and lighting circuit are described and the critical process of mass marketing in rural areas is described.
|
Seven Centuries of Energy Services
|
The Price and Use of Light in the United Kingdom (1300 - 2000)
|
Fouquet, R. Pearson, P.J.G.
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|
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This paper presents a survey of seven centuries of energy services within the UK. While emphasising the value of past experience, it also warns against the dangers of over-reliance on past trends for the long-run forecasting of energy consumption given the potential for the introduction of new technologies and fuels, and for rebound and saturation effects.
|
Rural Lighting Services
|
A Comparison of Lamps for Domestic Lighting in Developing Countries
|
Nieuwenhout, F.D.J. van de Rijt, P.J.N.M. Wiggelinkhuizen, E.J. van der Plas, R.J.
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Outcomes are presented of a World Bank funded research project. Emphasis is on 12 volt DC lights suitable for solar home systems in developing countries. For comparison a number of traditional light sources have also been included. Based on the measurements a proposal is formulated for a luminous efficacy standard.
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Business Plans
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Get Up Its Time
|
The Business Hand-Book for Uganda
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Uganda Industrial Research Institute
|
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Young people often lack the necessary skills to develop their business ideas, such as performing a market analysis, differentiating their product or service from the competition, preparing cash-flow statements and bookkeeping. This material has been developed to support young people with practical advice in the field.
|
REED Toolkit
|
A Handbook for Energy Entrepreneurs
|
Energy House
|
|
|
|
This Toolkit is a step-by-step guide to turning a clean energy business idea into a reality. The topics covered range from defining your personal and business objectives to preparing financial analyses and determining the distribution strategy. In addition to explaining what information is needed in an effective Business Plan, the Toolkit will help to gather that information, and then to present it in an informative and convincing manner. By the end, there is a Business Plan one can use to attract financing and to guide the growth of the company.
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Contracting
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Financial structure in the Indian power sector
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Carstairs, J. Ehrhardt, D.
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Energy Policy, Vol. 23 (1995), No. 11, pp. 981-990
|
1995
|
In India, the private power initiative of 1991 has offered one solution to the financing problem - the private financing of generation against long-term power purchase agreements. However, this approach encounters a major problem, the financial weakness of the purchasing agents, the state electricity boards, that pay a dominant role in most state's power sectors. The article discusses the consideration of the factors that will affect the optimal capital structure for SEBs.
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Enforcement, Regulation and Development
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|
Laffont, J.
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|
2001
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After discussing examples of enforcement failures for regulatory contracts in Africa, the article develops a regulation model with asymmetric information and imperfect enforcement. Either the regulator succeeds in forcing the regulated firm to fulfill the contract or renegotiation takes place.
|
ESMAP - Energy Services for the World's Poor
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|
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Energy Services for the World's Poor
|
|
World Bank ESMAP
|
World Bank ESMAP
|
|
2000
|
The report examines how a developing country government, concerned with tackling poverty among its citizens, should think about its role in the energy sector. Furthermore, it assesses the role energy policies and projects in alleviating poverty and asks what kinds of policies and projects are likely to have the most beneficial—and sustainable—impact. Finally, the World Bank report studies where energy sector policy advisers, similarly concerned with promoting development and improving the lot of the poor, should focus their efforts.
a) Energy services for the world's poor b) Trends in private investment in the energy sector (1990-1999) c) Selected Readings and key contacts at the World Bank Group
|
Energy demand of households
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|
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Rural Energy in Developing Countries
|
A Challenge for Economic Development
|
Barnes, D.F. Floor, W.M.
|
|
Annual Review of Energy Environment 1996, pp. 497-530
|
1996
|
This paper evaluates some successful programs and recommends that governments support market-oriented approaches that make the energy market equally accessible and attractive to local investors, communities, and consumers. According to the authors, such approaches ideally improve access to energy for rural and poor people by revising energy pricing and by making the first costs of the transition to modern and more sustainable uses of energy more affordable.
|
Energy Demand Analysis in Developing Countries
|
A Review
|
Bhatia, R.
|
|
Energy Journal, Vol. 8 (1987)
|
1987
|
The paper provides and overview of energy demand analyses at the aggregate, sectoral and end-use levels. After discussing methodological aspects of aquisition and analysing data on energy demand, the authors review approaches to analyze changes in energy consumption, gives empirical insights and outlines few research issues.
|
Household Fuel Choice in Zimbabwe
|
An Empirical Test of the Energy Ladder Hypothesis
|
Hosier, R.H. Dowd, J.
|
|
Resources and Energy, Vol. 9 (1987), pp. 347-361
|
1987
|
The paper applies a multinomial logit formulation of the energy ladder to household energy-use data from Zimbabwe. The results show that although households do move away from wood to kerosene and electricity as their economic status improves, a large number of other factors are important in determining household fuel choice.
|
From Linear Fuel Switching to Multiple Cooking Strategies
|
A Critique and Alternative to the Energy Ladder Model
|
Masera, O.R. Saatkamp, B.D. Kammen, D.M.
|
|
World Development, Vol. 28 (2000), No. 12, pp. 2083-2103
|
2000
|
In the paper the authors evaluate the energy ladder model utilizing data from a four-year (1992--96) case study of a village in Mexico and from a large-scale survey from four states of Mexico. They show that an alternate "multiple fuel" model of stove and fuel management based on the observed pattern of household accumulation of energy options, rather than the simple rogression depicted in the traditional energy ladder scenario, more accurately depicts cooking fuel use patterns in rural households.
|
Impact Evaluation Surveys
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