Energy, environment and sustainable development III [energy infrastructure policies and issues]
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RT Generic T1 Energy, environment and sustainable development III [energy infrastructure policies and issues] A1 UN.ESCAP, YR 1999 LK https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/5742 PB United Nations AB <p>Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) which addresses a selected theme of current interest to analysts, policy makers and planners in the energy sector.</p> <p>This publication, No. 36 in the series, takes up the theme of energy, environment and sustainable development for the third consecutive time. It is largely based on material presented at the Ad Hoc Expert Group Meeting on Energy Infrastructure and Energy Pricing Policies, held in Bangkok from 28 to 30 May 1997. Sustainable energy development and management are in many ways contingent upon the right pricing signals to the users. On the other hand, for investment purposes also, particularly for private sector participation in energy infrastructure, appropriate energy pricing is a prerequisite at a time when private sector funding is seen as a necessity to address the energy infrastructure bottleneck in social and economic development.</p> <p>Most of the operational activities of ESCAP in the area of energy development and management rely on extrabudgetary sources of funding, multilateral funding from agencies such as the United Nations Development Programme and bilateral funding from sources such as the governments of Australia, China, France, Japan and the Netherlands. However, this publication and the senior expert group meeting which was the source of the material for it were part of the ESCAP regular programme of work for 1996-1997. It is the hope of the ESCAP secretariat that the publication will find a receptive and appreciative audience among its readers, relating, as it does, to the fine-tuning of infrastructure and pricing policies on energy development to the often elusive goal of sustainable development.</p> OL English(30) TY - GEN T1 - Energy, environment and sustainable development III [energy infrastructure policies and issues] AU - UN.ESCAP Y1 - 1999 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/5742 PB - United Nations AB -Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) which addresses a selected theme of current interest to analysts, policy makers and planners in the energy sector.
This publication, No. 36 in the series, takes up the theme of energy, environment and sustainable development for the third consecutive time. It is largely based on material presented at the Ad Hoc Expert Group Meeting on Energy Infrastructure and Energy Pricing Policies, held in Bangkok from 28 to 30 May 1997. Sustainable energy development and management are in many ways contingent upon the right pricing signals to the users. On the other hand, for investment purposes also, particularly for private sector participation in energy infrastructure, appropriate energy pricing is a prerequisite at a time when private sector funding is seen as a necessity to address the energy infrastructure bottleneck in social and economic development.
Most of the operational activities of ESCAP in the area of energy development and management rely on extrabudgetary sources of funding, multilateral funding from agencies such as the United Nations Development Programme and bilateral funding from sources such as the governments of Australia, China, France, Japan and the Netherlands. However, this publication and the senior expert group meeting which was the source of the material for it were part of the ESCAP regular programme of work for 1996-1997. It is the hope of the ESCAP secretariat that the publication will find a receptive and appreciative audience among its readers, relating, as it does, to the fine-tuning of infrastructure and pricing policies on energy development to the often elusive goal of sustainable development.
@misc{20.500.12870_5742 author = {UN.ESCAP}, title = {Energy, environment and sustainable development III [energy infrastructure policies and issues]}, year = {1999}, abstract = {Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) which addresses a selected theme of current interest to analysts, policy makers and planners in the energy sector.
This publication, No. 36 in the series, takes up the theme of energy, environment and sustainable development for the third consecutive time. It is largely based on material presented at the Ad Hoc Expert Group Meeting on Energy Infrastructure and Energy Pricing Policies, held in Bangkok from 28 to 30 May 1997. Sustainable energy development and management are in many ways contingent upon the right pricing signals to the users. On the other hand, for investment purposes also, particularly for private sector participation in energy infrastructure, appropriate energy pricing is a prerequisite at a time when private sector funding is seen as a necessity to address the energy infrastructure bottleneck in social and economic development.
Most of the operational activities of ESCAP in the area of energy development and management rely on extrabudgetary sources of funding, multilateral funding from agencies such as the United Nations Development Programme and bilateral funding from sources such as the governments of Australia, China, France, Japan and the Netherlands. However, this publication and the senior expert group meeting which was the source of the material for it were part of the ESCAP regular programme of work for 1996-1997. It is the hope of the ESCAP secretariat that the publication will find a receptive and appreciative audience among its readers, relating, as it does, to the fine-tuning of infrastructure and pricing policies on energy development to the often elusive goal of sustainable development.
}, url = {https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/5742} } @misc{20.500.12870_5742 author = {UN.ESCAP}, title = {Energy, environment and sustainable development III [energy infrastructure policies and issues]}, year = {1999}, abstract = {Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) which addresses a selected theme of current interest to analysts, policy makers and planners in the energy sector.
This publication, No. 36 in the series, takes up the theme of energy, environment and sustainable development for the third consecutive time. It is largely based on material presented at the Ad Hoc Expert Group Meeting on Energy Infrastructure and Energy Pricing Policies, held in Bangkok from 28 to 30 May 1997. Sustainable energy development and management are in many ways contingent upon the right pricing signals to the users. On the other hand, for investment purposes also, particularly for private sector participation in energy infrastructure, appropriate energy pricing is a prerequisite at a time when private sector funding is seen as a necessity to address the energy infrastructure bottleneck in social and economic development.
Most of the operational activities of ESCAP in the area of energy development and management rely on extrabudgetary sources of funding, multilateral funding from agencies such as the United Nations Development Programme and bilateral funding from sources such as the governments of Australia, China, France, Japan and the Netherlands. However, this publication and the senior expert group meeting which was the source of the material for it were part of the ESCAP regular programme of work for 1996-1997. It is the hope of the ESCAP secretariat that the publication will find a receptive and appreciative audience among its readers, relating, as it does, to the fine-tuning of infrastructure and pricing policies on energy development to the often elusive goal of sustainable development.
}, url = {https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/5742} } TY - GEN T1 - Energy, environment and sustainable development III [energy infrastructure policies and issues] AU - UN.ESCAP UR - https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/5742 PB - United Nations AB -Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) which addresses a selected theme of current interest to analysts, policy makers and planners in the energy sector.
This publication, No. 36 in the series, takes up the theme of energy, environment and sustainable development for the third consecutive time. It is largely based on material presented at the Ad Hoc Expert Group Meeting on Energy Infrastructure and Energy Pricing Policies, held in Bangkok from 28 to 30 May 1997. Sustainable energy development and management are in many ways contingent upon the right pricing signals to the users. On the other hand, for investment purposes also, particularly for private sector participation in energy infrastructure, appropriate energy pricing is a prerequisite at a time when private sector funding is seen as a necessity to address the energy infrastructure bottleneck in social and economic development.
Most of the operational activities of ESCAP in the area of energy development and management rely on extrabudgetary sources of funding, multilateral funding from agencies such as the United Nations Development Programme and bilateral funding from sources such as the governments of Australia, China, France, Japan and the Netherlands. However, this publication and the senior expert group meeting which was the source of the material for it were part of the ESCAP regular programme of work for 1996-1997. It is the hope of the ESCAP secretariat that the publication will find a receptive and appreciative audience among its readers, relating, as it does, to the fine-tuning of infrastructure and pricing policies on energy development to the often elusive goal of sustainable development.
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Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) which addresses a selected theme of current interest to analysts, policy makers and planners in the energy sector.
This publication, No. 36 in the series, takes up the theme of energy, environment and sustainable development for the third consecutive time. It is largely based on material presented at the Ad Hoc Expert Group Meeting on Energy Infrastructure and Energy Pricing Policies, held in Bangkok from 28 to 30 May 1997. Sustainable energy development and management are in many ways contingent upon the right pricing signals to the users. On the other hand, for investment purposes also, particularly for private sector participation in energy infrastructure, appropriate energy pricing is a prerequisite at a time when private sector funding is seen as a necessity to address the energy infrastructure bottleneck in social and economic development.
Most of the operational activities of ESCAP in the area of energy development and management rely on extrabudgetary sources of funding, multilateral funding from agencies such as the United Nations Development Programme and bilateral funding from sources such as the governments of Australia, China, France, Japan and the Netherlands. However, this publication and the senior expert group meeting which was the source of the material for it were part of the ESCAP regular programme of work for 1996-1997. It is the hope of the ESCAP secretariat that the publication will find a receptive and appreciative audience among its readers, relating, as it does, to the fine-tuning of infrastructure and pricing policies on energy development to the often elusive goal of sustainable development.