Strengthening the Non-Conventional and Rural Energy Development Program in the Philippines : A Policy Framework and Action Plan
As articulated in the new energy plan for 1999-2008, the key sector objectives for the Philippines energy sector remain security of energy supply, affordable prices, and an energy infrastructure compatible with broader social and environmental obje...
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Format: | ESMAP Paper |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
Washington, DC
2014
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/08/1671295/strengthening-non-conventional-rural-energy-development-program-philippines-policy-framework-action-plan http://hdl.handle.net/10986/20293 |
Summary: | As articulated in the new energy plan
for 1999-2008, the key sector objectives for the Philippines
energy sector remain security of energy supply, affordable
prices, and an energy infrastructure compatible with broader
social and environmental objectives. Ths report is organized
as follows: Chapter 1 briefly lays out the social,
environmental, and economic justifications for developing
non-renewable energy resources (NRE) against the backdrop of
privatization and reform of the energy sector. It reviews
the experience with NRE from the 1970s to the present,
highlighting some important lessons learned from both
successful and failed initiatives. Chapter 2 reviews the
commercial status and current and expected costs
internationally of NRE technologies of potential usefulness.
It distinguishes between immediate and long-term potential,
small- and large-scale systems, and rural and urban
applications, as well as reviewing the status of several
off-grid and grid-connected technologies. Chapter 3 examines
how existing and impending policies, legislation,
incentives, procedures, and institutional arrangements
affect, positively or negatively, the commercialization of
NRE in the Philippines. Chapter 4 outlines near-term
investment possibilities in off-grid electrification and
large-scale wind power. The final chapter outlines some
specific actions that need to be taken to pursue the
priority investments identified. the chapter then reviews
multilateral and bilateral assistance. |
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