A climate resilient energy sector in the Kyrgyz Republic : action plan and policy recommendations framework
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RT Generic T1 A climate resilient energy sector in the Kyrgyz Republic : action plan and policy recommendations framework A1 Chepelianskaia, Olga, Sarkar-Swaisgood, Madhurima YR 2022-01 LK https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/4527 PB United Nations AB The Kyrgyz Republic is the third most vulnerable country to climate change impacts in Eastern Europe and Central Asia (UNDP, 2013). Climate change and extreme weather events annually cost the country’s economy 1% to 1.5% of GDP (ADB, 2018). According to UNDP estimates, if disaster damage increases at the rate of the annual population growth (1.1% per year), a conservative assumption is that climate-related disasters could total USD 156 million by 2032 (UNDP, 2013). OL English(30) TY - GEN T1 - A climate resilient energy sector in the Kyrgyz Republic : action plan and policy recommendations framework AU - Chepelianskaia, Olga, Sarkar-Swaisgood, Madhurima Y1 - 2022-01 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/4527 PB - United Nations AB - The Kyrgyz Republic is the third most vulnerable country to climate change impacts in Eastern Europe and Central Asia (UNDP, 2013). Climate change and extreme weather events annually cost the country’s economy 1% to 1.5% of GDP (ADB, 2018). According to UNDP estimates, if disaster damage increases at the rate of the annual population growth (1.1% per year), a conservative assumption is that climate-related disasters could total USD 156 million by 2032 (UNDP, 2013). @misc{20.500.12870_4527 author = {Chepelianskaia, Olga, Sarkar-Swaisgood, Madhurima}, title = {A climate resilient energy sector in the Kyrgyz Republic : action plan and policy recommendations framework}, year = {2022-01}, abstract = {The Kyrgyz Republic is the third most vulnerable country to climate change impacts in Eastern Europe and Central Asia (UNDP, 2013). Climate change and extreme weather events annually cost the country’s economy 1% to 1.5% of GDP (ADB, 2018). According to UNDP estimates, if disaster damage increases at the rate of the annual population growth (1.1% per year), a conservative assumption is that climate-related disasters could total USD 156 million by 2032 (UNDP, 2013).}, url = {https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/4527} } @misc{20.500.12870_4527 author = {Chepelianskaia, Olga, Sarkar-Swaisgood, Madhurima}, title = {A climate resilient energy sector in the Kyrgyz Republic : action plan and policy recommendations framework}, year = {2022-01}, abstract = {The Kyrgyz Republic is the third most vulnerable country to climate change impacts in Eastern Europe and Central Asia (UNDP, 2013). Climate change and extreme weather events annually cost the country’s economy 1% to 1.5% of GDP (ADB, 2018). According to UNDP estimates, if disaster damage increases at the rate of the annual population growth (1.1% per year), a conservative assumption is that climate-related disasters could total USD 156 million by 2032 (UNDP, 2013).}, url = {https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/4527} } TY - GEN T1 - A climate resilient energy sector in the Kyrgyz Republic : action plan and policy recommendations framework AU - Chepelianskaia, Olga, Sarkar-Swaisgood, Madhurima UR - https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/4527 PB - United Nations AB - The Kyrgyz Republic is the third most vulnerable country to climate change impacts in Eastern Europe and Central Asia (UNDP, 2013). Climate change and extreme weather events annually cost the country’s economy 1% to 1.5% of GDP (ADB, 2018). According to UNDP estimates, if disaster damage increases at the rate of the annual population growth (1.1% per year), a conservative assumption is that climate-related disasters could total USD 156 million by 2032 (UNDP, 2013).Metadata
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January 2022
January 2022
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Abstract
The Kyrgyz Republic is the third most vulnerable country to climate change impacts in Eastern Europe and Central Asia (UNDP, 2013). Climate change and extreme weather events annually cost the country’s economy 1% to 1.5% of GDP (ADB, 2018). According to UNDP estimates, if disaster damage increases at the rate of the annual population growth (1.1% per year), a conservative assumption is that climate-related disasters could total USD 156 million by 2032 (UNDP, 2013).