Private Sector Participation in Transmission Systems : Making It Work
The private sector can be a strategic partner in building and maintaining transmission networks, depending on how well its participation is structured to achieve the desired outcomes. In Peru, private sector participation has driven down both inves...
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World Bank, Washington, DC
2015
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/11/25469435/private-sector-participation-transmission-systems-making-work http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23135 |
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okr-10986-231352021-04-23T14:04:13Z Private Sector Participation in Transmission Systems : Making It Work Sanchez, Pedro E. Oguah, Samuel WASTE RENEWABLE RESOURCES FOSSIL FUELS CARBON INCOME ACTIVITIES ACCESS TO MODERN ENERGY GENERATION INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY CLEAN ENERGY TRADITIONAL BIOMASS FINAL ENERGY CONSUMPTION EMISSIONS POWER GRIDS INCENTIVES POWER SUPPLY GAS PE PRICE ENERGY CONSUMERS POWER SYSTEM DISTRIBUTION OF ENERGY BIOMASS CO2 PETROLEUM PER CAPITA INCOME OIL TRANSMISSION FACILITIES EMISSION FACTOR POWER GENERATION ENERGY MIX FOREST RESIDUES POWER SECTOR SUSTAINABLE ENERGY CAPACITY COOKING ENERGY INTENSITY TOTAL CONSUMPTION ELECTRIFICATION WATER ENERGY RESOURCES SOLID FUELS PRIMARY ENERGY CONSUMPTION ENERGY SERVICES CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE RENEWABLE ENERGY RESOURCES GAS EMISSIONS PELLETS GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT POWER UTILITIES FUELS ENERGY CONSUMPTION EMISSION GREENHOUSE LEAD HEAT CLIMATE CHANGE BALANCE POWER TRADE BLACK CARBON SOURCE OF ENERGY UTILITIES POWER ELECTRICITY CLIMATE HYDROPOWER WORLD ENERGY FOREST PETROLEUM GAS ELECTRICITY TARIFFS TOTAL FINAL ENERGY CONSUMPTION CO ENVIRONMENT TRANSMISSION SYSTEM TARIFF LEVELS PRIMARY ENERGY ENERGY EFFICIENCY ENERGY DEMAND ACCESS TO ELECTRICITY COMBUSTION INVESTMENT GASEOUS FUELS COAL TARIFF TRANSMISSION INFRASTRUCTURE FUEL GLOBAL ENERGY MIX FACILITIES AVAILABILITY ELECTRIC TRANSMISSION BOTTOM LINE INVESTMENTS METHANE BRIQUETTES HOUSEHOLD ENERGY ENERGY INDUSTRIES LIQUEFIED PETROLEUM GAS POWER SYSTEM PLANNING RENEWABLE ENERGY FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE HEAT GENERATION PIPELINE FOSSIL TRANSMISSION LINES APPROACH BENEFITS ENERGY The private sector can be a strategic partner in building and maintaining transmission networks, depending on how well its participation is structured to achieve the desired outcomes. In Peru, private sector participation has driven down both investment and operation and maintenance (O and M) costs. Upper-middle-income countries account for about 65 percent of the private capital raised for investment in transmission infrastructure between 1994 and 2013. In the presence of the right policies and investment climate, private sector participation in transmission systems can improve the security, reliability, and quality of supply in a cost-effective manner. Strong, independent regulatory institutions are critical. Such institutions should be equipped to develop detailed expansion plans that make it possible to identify and select projects. 2015-11-24T19:06:12Z 2015-11-24T19:06:12Z 2015 Brief http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/11/25469435/private-sector-participation-transmission-systems-making-work http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23135 English en_US Live Wire, 2015/52 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Brief Publications & Research |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English en_US |
topic |
WASTE RENEWABLE RESOURCES FOSSIL FUELS CARBON INCOME ACTIVITIES ACCESS TO MODERN ENERGY GENERATION INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY CLEAN ENERGY TRADITIONAL BIOMASS FINAL ENERGY CONSUMPTION EMISSIONS POWER GRIDS INCENTIVES POWER SUPPLY GAS PE PRICE ENERGY CONSUMERS POWER SYSTEM DISTRIBUTION OF ENERGY BIOMASS CO2 PETROLEUM PER CAPITA INCOME OIL TRANSMISSION FACILITIES EMISSION FACTOR POWER GENERATION ENERGY MIX FOREST RESIDUES POWER SECTOR SUSTAINABLE ENERGY CAPACITY COOKING ENERGY INTENSITY TOTAL CONSUMPTION ELECTRIFICATION WATER ENERGY RESOURCES SOLID FUELS PRIMARY ENERGY CONSUMPTION ENERGY SERVICES CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE RENEWABLE ENERGY RESOURCES GAS EMISSIONS PELLETS GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT POWER UTILITIES FUELS ENERGY CONSUMPTION EMISSION GREENHOUSE LEAD HEAT CLIMATE CHANGE BALANCE POWER TRADE BLACK CARBON SOURCE OF ENERGY UTILITIES POWER ELECTRICITY CLIMATE HYDROPOWER WORLD ENERGY FOREST PETROLEUM GAS ELECTRICITY TARIFFS TOTAL FINAL ENERGY CONSUMPTION CO ENVIRONMENT TRANSMISSION SYSTEM TARIFF LEVELS PRIMARY ENERGY ENERGY EFFICIENCY ENERGY DEMAND ACCESS TO ELECTRICITY COMBUSTION INVESTMENT GASEOUS FUELS COAL TARIFF TRANSMISSION INFRASTRUCTURE FUEL GLOBAL ENERGY MIX FACILITIES AVAILABILITY ELECTRIC TRANSMISSION BOTTOM LINE INVESTMENTS METHANE BRIQUETTES HOUSEHOLD ENERGY ENERGY INDUSTRIES LIQUEFIED PETROLEUM GAS POWER SYSTEM PLANNING RENEWABLE ENERGY FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE HEAT GENERATION PIPELINE FOSSIL TRANSMISSION LINES APPROACH BENEFITS ENERGY |
spellingShingle |
WASTE RENEWABLE RESOURCES FOSSIL FUELS CARBON INCOME ACTIVITIES ACCESS TO MODERN ENERGY GENERATION INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY CLEAN ENERGY TRADITIONAL BIOMASS FINAL ENERGY CONSUMPTION EMISSIONS POWER GRIDS INCENTIVES POWER SUPPLY GAS PE PRICE ENERGY CONSUMERS POWER SYSTEM DISTRIBUTION OF ENERGY BIOMASS CO2 PETROLEUM PER CAPITA INCOME OIL TRANSMISSION FACILITIES EMISSION FACTOR POWER GENERATION ENERGY MIX FOREST RESIDUES POWER SECTOR SUSTAINABLE ENERGY CAPACITY COOKING ENERGY INTENSITY TOTAL CONSUMPTION ELECTRIFICATION WATER ENERGY RESOURCES SOLID FUELS PRIMARY ENERGY CONSUMPTION ENERGY SERVICES CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE RENEWABLE ENERGY RESOURCES GAS EMISSIONS PELLETS GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT POWER UTILITIES FUELS ENERGY CONSUMPTION EMISSION GREENHOUSE LEAD HEAT CLIMATE CHANGE BALANCE POWER TRADE BLACK CARBON SOURCE OF ENERGY UTILITIES POWER ELECTRICITY CLIMATE HYDROPOWER WORLD ENERGY FOREST PETROLEUM GAS ELECTRICITY TARIFFS TOTAL FINAL ENERGY CONSUMPTION CO ENVIRONMENT TRANSMISSION SYSTEM TARIFF LEVELS PRIMARY ENERGY ENERGY EFFICIENCY ENERGY DEMAND ACCESS TO ELECTRICITY COMBUSTION INVESTMENT GASEOUS FUELS COAL TARIFF TRANSMISSION INFRASTRUCTURE FUEL GLOBAL ENERGY MIX FACILITIES AVAILABILITY ELECTRIC TRANSMISSION BOTTOM LINE INVESTMENTS METHANE BRIQUETTES HOUSEHOLD ENERGY ENERGY INDUSTRIES LIQUEFIED PETROLEUM GAS POWER SYSTEM PLANNING RENEWABLE ENERGY FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE HEAT GENERATION PIPELINE FOSSIL TRANSMISSION LINES APPROACH BENEFITS ENERGY Sanchez, Pedro E. Oguah, Samuel Private Sector Participation in Transmission Systems : Making It Work |
relation |
Live Wire, 2015/52 |
description |
The private sector can be a strategic
partner in building and maintaining transmission networks,
depending on how well its participation is structured to
achieve the desired outcomes. In Peru, private sector
participation has driven down both investment and operation
and maintenance (O and M) costs. Upper-middle-income
countries account for about 65 percent of the private
capital raised for investment in transmission infrastructure
between 1994 and 2013. In the presence of the right policies
and investment climate, private sector participation in
transmission systems can improve the security, reliability,
and quality of supply in a cost-effective manner. Strong,
independent regulatory institutions are critical. Such
institutions should be equipped to develop detailed
expansion plans that make it possible to identify and select projects. |
format |
Brief |
author |
Sanchez, Pedro E. Oguah, Samuel |
author_facet |
Sanchez, Pedro E. Oguah, Samuel |
author_sort |
Sanchez, Pedro E. |
title |
Private Sector Participation in Transmission Systems : Making It Work |
title_short |
Private Sector Participation in Transmission Systems : Making It Work |
title_full |
Private Sector Participation in Transmission Systems : Making It Work |
title_fullStr |
Private Sector Participation in Transmission Systems : Making It Work |
title_full_unstemmed |
Private Sector Participation in Transmission Systems : Making It Work |
title_sort |
private sector participation in transmission systems : making it work |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2015 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/11/25469435/private-sector-participation-transmission-systems-making-work http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23135 |
_version_ |
1764453010040160256 |