Capturing and Storing Carbon : The World Bank's Role
Developing countries will be increasingly important players in the quest to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases. By 2035, non-OECD countries will account for 66 percent of primary energy demand and, in the meantime, for 90 percent of growth in dem...
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World Bank Group, Washington, DC
2014
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/01/23032955/capturing-storing-carbon-world-banks-role http://hdl.handle.net/10986/20869 |
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okr-10986-208692021-04-23T14:03:59Z Capturing and Storing Carbon : The World Bank's Role Kulichenko, Nataliya Zechter, Richard H. Ahmed, Asad Ali ABATEMENT ACCESS TO MODERN ENERGY AIR ANNUAL GROWTH RATE AUXILIARY ENERGY CONSUMPTION BIOMASS BLACK CARBON BOTTOM LINE BRIQUETTES BURNING COAL CAPITAL COST CARBON CARBON CAPTURE CARBON DIOXIDE CARBON DIOXIDE CAPTURE CARBON ENERGY CARBON FINANCE CARBON PRICE CARBON TAXES CARBON TECHNOLOGIES CLEAN ENERGY CLIMATE CLIMATE CHANGE CLIMATE CHANGE POLICIES CO CO2 COAL COMBUSTION CUMULATIVE EMISSIONS CUMULATIVE EMISSIONS REDUCTIONS DISTRIBUTION OF ENERGY ECONOMIC IMPACT ELECTRICAL POWER ELECTRICITY ELECTRICITY EFFICIENCY ELECTRICITY ENERGY ELECTRICITY SECTOR ELECTRIFICATION EMISSION EMISSION FACTOR EMISSION SOURCES EMISSIONS END-USE ENERGY CONSUMERS ENERGY DEMAND ENERGY EFFICIENCY ENERGY INDUSTRIES ENERGY INTENSITY ENERGY MIX ENERGY STRATEGIES ENERGY SYSTEM ENERGY TECHNOLOGY ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS FEASIBILITY FOREST FOREST RESIDUES FOSSIL FOSSIL FUEL FOSSIL FUELS FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE FUEL COSTS FUEL SWITCHING FUELS GAS GASEOUS FUELS GENERATION CAPACITY GLOBAL ENERGY MIX GREENHOUSE GREENHOUSE GAS GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS GREENHOUSE GASES GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT GROWTH IN DEMAND HEAT HEAT GENERATION HOUSEHOLD ENERGY HYDROPOWER INCOME INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY INVESTMENT DECISIONS INVESTMENTS IN ENERGY IPCC LIQUEFIED PETROLEUM GAS LOW-CARBON METHANE METHANE RECOVERY MODERN WORLD OIL PE PELLETS PENALTIES PETROLEUM PILOT PROJECTS PIPELINE POWER POWER GENERATION POWER GENERATION CAPACITY POWER PLANT POWER PLANTS POWER SECTOR POWER SECTOR PLANNING PRICE SIGNAL PRIMARY ENERGY PRIMARY ENERGY CONSUMPTION PRIMARY ENERGY DEMAND RENEWABLE ENERGY RENEWABLE ENERGY RESOURCES RENEWABLE ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES RESERVOIRS SOLID FUELS SOLVENTS SOURCE OF ENERGY SUSTAINABLE ENERGY SUSTAINABLE ENERGY FUTURE TEMPERATURE THERMAL PLANTS TRADITIONAL BIOMASS TRANSMISSION INFRASTRUCTURE UTILITIES VESSELS WASTE WORLD ENERGY Developing countries will be increasingly important players in the quest to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases. By 2035, non-OECD countries will account for 66 percent of primary energy demand and, in the meantime, for 90 percent of growth in demand. Among the steps necessary to ensure that carbon capture and storage fulfills its potential to cut emissions are more powerful policy incentives, including a global carbon price; testing of new technologies in demonstration projects; and development of storage infrastructure. 2014-12-22T15:43:52Z 2014-12-22T15:43:52Z 2014-12 Brief http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/01/23032955/capturing-storing-carbon-world-banks-role http://hdl.handle.net/10986/20869 English en_US Live Wire, 2015/24 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Group, 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 |
ABATEMENT ACCESS TO MODERN ENERGY AIR ANNUAL GROWTH RATE AUXILIARY ENERGY CONSUMPTION BIOMASS BLACK CARBON BOTTOM LINE BRIQUETTES BURNING COAL CAPITAL COST CARBON CARBON CAPTURE CARBON DIOXIDE CARBON DIOXIDE CAPTURE CARBON ENERGY CARBON FINANCE CARBON PRICE CARBON TAXES CARBON TECHNOLOGIES CLEAN ENERGY CLIMATE CLIMATE CHANGE CLIMATE CHANGE POLICIES CO CO2 COAL COMBUSTION CUMULATIVE EMISSIONS CUMULATIVE EMISSIONS REDUCTIONS DISTRIBUTION OF ENERGY ECONOMIC IMPACT ELECTRICAL POWER ELECTRICITY ELECTRICITY EFFICIENCY ELECTRICITY ENERGY ELECTRICITY SECTOR ELECTRIFICATION EMISSION EMISSION FACTOR EMISSION SOURCES EMISSIONS END-USE ENERGY CONSUMERS ENERGY DEMAND ENERGY EFFICIENCY ENERGY INDUSTRIES ENERGY INTENSITY ENERGY MIX ENERGY STRATEGIES ENERGY SYSTEM ENERGY TECHNOLOGY ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS FEASIBILITY FOREST FOREST RESIDUES FOSSIL FOSSIL FUEL FOSSIL FUELS FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE FUEL COSTS FUEL SWITCHING FUELS GAS GASEOUS FUELS GENERATION CAPACITY GLOBAL ENERGY MIX GREENHOUSE GREENHOUSE GAS GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS GREENHOUSE GASES GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT GROWTH IN DEMAND HEAT HEAT GENERATION HOUSEHOLD ENERGY HYDROPOWER INCOME INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY INVESTMENT DECISIONS INVESTMENTS IN ENERGY IPCC LIQUEFIED PETROLEUM GAS LOW-CARBON METHANE METHANE RECOVERY MODERN WORLD OIL PE PELLETS PENALTIES PETROLEUM PILOT PROJECTS PIPELINE POWER POWER GENERATION POWER GENERATION CAPACITY POWER PLANT POWER PLANTS POWER SECTOR POWER SECTOR PLANNING PRICE SIGNAL PRIMARY ENERGY PRIMARY ENERGY CONSUMPTION PRIMARY ENERGY DEMAND RENEWABLE ENERGY RENEWABLE ENERGY RESOURCES RENEWABLE ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES RESERVOIRS SOLID FUELS SOLVENTS SOURCE OF ENERGY SUSTAINABLE ENERGY SUSTAINABLE ENERGY FUTURE TEMPERATURE THERMAL PLANTS TRADITIONAL BIOMASS TRANSMISSION INFRASTRUCTURE UTILITIES VESSELS WASTE WORLD ENERGY |
spellingShingle |
ABATEMENT ACCESS TO MODERN ENERGY AIR ANNUAL GROWTH RATE AUXILIARY ENERGY CONSUMPTION BIOMASS BLACK CARBON BOTTOM LINE BRIQUETTES BURNING COAL CAPITAL COST CARBON CARBON CAPTURE CARBON DIOXIDE CARBON DIOXIDE CAPTURE CARBON ENERGY CARBON FINANCE CARBON PRICE CARBON TAXES CARBON TECHNOLOGIES CLEAN ENERGY CLIMATE CLIMATE CHANGE CLIMATE CHANGE POLICIES CO CO2 COAL COMBUSTION CUMULATIVE EMISSIONS CUMULATIVE EMISSIONS REDUCTIONS DISTRIBUTION OF ENERGY ECONOMIC IMPACT ELECTRICAL POWER ELECTRICITY ELECTRICITY EFFICIENCY ELECTRICITY ENERGY ELECTRICITY SECTOR ELECTRIFICATION EMISSION EMISSION FACTOR EMISSION SOURCES EMISSIONS END-USE ENERGY CONSUMERS ENERGY DEMAND ENERGY EFFICIENCY ENERGY INDUSTRIES ENERGY INTENSITY ENERGY MIX ENERGY STRATEGIES ENERGY SYSTEM ENERGY TECHNOLOGY ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS FEASIBILITY FOREST FOREST RESIDUES FOSSIL FOSSIL FUEL FOSSIL FUELS FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE FUEL COSTS FUEL SWITCHING FUELS GAS GASEOUS FUELS GENERATION CAPACITY GLOBAL ENERGY MIX GREENHOUSE GREENHOUSE GAS GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS GREENHOUSE GASES GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT GROWTH IN DEMAND HEAT HEAT GENERATION HOUSEHOLD ENERGY HYDROPOWER INCOME INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY INVESTMENT DECISIONS INVESTMENTS IN ENERGY IPCC LIQUEFIED PETROLEUM GAS LOW-CARBON METHANE METHANE RECOVERY MODERN WORLD OIL PE PELLETS PENALTIES PETROLEUM PILOT PROJECTS PIPELINE POWER POWER GENERATION POWER GENERATION CAPACITY POWER PLANT POWER PLANTS POWER SECTOR POWER SECTOR PLANNING PRICE SIGNAL PRIMARY ENERGY PRIMARY ENERGY CONSUMPTION PRIMARY ENERGY DEMAND RENEWABLE ENERGY RENEWABLE ENERGY RESOURCES RENEWABLE ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES RESERVOIRS SOLID FUELS SOLVENTS SOURCE OF ENERGY SUSTAINABLE ENERGY SUSTAINABLE ENERGY FUTURE TEMPERATURE THERMAL PLANTS TRADITIONAL BIOMASS TRANSMISSION INFRASTRUCTURE UTILITIES VESSELS WASTE WORLD ENERGY Kulichenko, Nataliya Zechter, Richard H. Ahmed, Asad Ali Capturing and Storing Carbon : The World Bank's Role |
relation |
Live Wire, 2015/24 |
description |
Developing countries will be
increasingly important players in the quest to reduce
emissions of greenhouse gases. By 2035, non-OECD countries
will account for 66 percent of primary energy demand and, in
the meantime, for 90 percent of growth in demand. Among the
steps necessary to ensure that carbon capture and storage
fulfills its potential to cut emissions are more powerful
policy incentives, including a global carbon price; testing
of new technologies in demonstration projects; and
development of storage infrastructure. |
format |
Brief |
author |
Kulichenko, Nataliya Zechter, Richard H. Ahmed, Asad Ali |
author_facet |
Kulichenko, Nataliya Zechter, Richard H. Ahmed, Asad Ali |
author_sort |
Kulichenko, Nataliya |
title |
Capturing and Storing Carbon : The World Bank's Role |
title_short |
Capturing and Storing Carbon : The World Bank's Role |
title_full |
Capturing and Storing Carbon : The World Bank's Role |
title_fullStr |
Capturing and Storing Carbon : The World Bank's Role |
title_full_unstemmed |
Capturing and Storing Carbon : The World Bank's Role |
title_sort |
capturing and storing carbon : the world bank's role |
publisher |
World Bank Group, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/01/23032955/capturing-storing-carbon-world-banks-role http://hdl.handle.net/10986/20869 |
_version_ |
1764447171269099520 |