Public Utility Reform : What Lessons Can We Learn from IEG Evaluations in the Energy and Water Sectors?

This synthesis provides a review of operationally relevant findings and lessons from World Bank-supported utility reforms in the energy and water sectors, as identified in IEG evaluation products. The report summarizes the IEG evidence of what work...

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Main Author: World Bank
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/681351607013294306/Public-Utility-Reform-What-lessons-can-we-learn-from-IEG-evaluations-in-the-energy-and-water-sectors
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35076
id okr-10986-35076
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-350762021-09-16T22:19:37Z Public Utility Reform : What Lessons Can We Learn from IEG Evaluations in the Energy and Water Sectors? World Bank PUBLIC UTILITIES PUBLIC SECTOR REFORM ENERGY SECTOR TRANSPARENCY ACCOUNTABILITY EFFICIENCY CONSUMER PROTECTION MARKET ORIENTATION RENEWABLE ENERGY RURAL ELECTRIFICATION WATER AND SANITATION DEVELOPMENT POLICY OPERATIONS INVESTMENT PROJECT FUNDING FINANCIAL SUSTAINABILITY This synthesis provides a review of operationally relevant findings and lessons from World Bank-supported utility reforms in the energy and water sectors, as identified in IEG evaluation products. The report summarizes the IEG evidence of what worked and what did not work, and why, in WB support of public utility reforms in its client countries. It identifies two fundamental areas of utility reform – improving institutional accountability and strengthening financial viability. The first involves measures to reform institutional arrangements, policies, and regulations; sector planning, utility management, capacity, and skills; and creating the framework for private investment. The second requires strengthening cost recovery, commercial viability, and operational efficiency. The report compares the effectiveness of Bank instruments (DPOs and IPFs) across selected financial viability targets. It identifies lessons for each sector and cross-cutting lessons for both energy and water operations centered on promoting financial and operational discipline (regardless of private or public ownership), and institutional governance and accountability. 2021-01-28T17:42:18Z 2021-01-28T17:42:18Z 2020-01-30 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/681351607013294306/Public-Utility-Reform-What-lessons-can-we-learn-from-IEG-evaluations-in-the-energy-and-water-sectors http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35076 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: IEG Evaluation
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic PUBLIC UTILITIES
PUBLIC SECTOR REFORM
ENERGY SECTOR
TRANSPARENCY
ACCOUNTABILITY
EFFICIENCY
CONSUMER PROTECTION
MARKET ORIENTATION
RENEWABLE ENERGY
RURAL ELECTRIFICATION
WATER AND SANITATION
DEVELOPMENT POLICY OPERATIONS
INVESTMENT PROJECT FUNDING
FINANCIAL SUSTAINABILITY
spellingShingle PUBLIC UTILITIES
PUBLIC SECTOR REFORM
ENERGY SECTOR
TRANSPARENCY
ACCOUNTABILITY
EFFICIENCY
CONSUMER PROTECTION
MARKET ORIENTATION
RENEWABLE ENERGY
RURAL ELECTRIFICATION
WATER AND SANITATION
DEVELOPMENT POLICY OPERATIONS
INVESTMENT PROJECT FUNDING
FINANCIAL SUSTAINABILITY
World Bank
Public Utility Reform : What Lessons Can We Learn from IEG Evaluations in the Energy and Water Sectors?
description This synthesis provides a review of operationally relevant findings and lessons from World Bank-supported utility reforms in the energy and water sectors, as identified in IEG evaluation products. The report summarizes the IEG evidence of what worked and what did not work, and why, in WB support of public utility reforms in its client countries. It identifies two fundamental areas of utility reform – improving institutional accountability and strengthening financial viability. The first involves measures to reform institutional arrangements, policies, and regulations; sector planning, utility management, capacity, and skills; and creating the framework for private investment. The second requires strengthening cost recovery, commercial viability, and operational efficiency. The report compares the effectiveness of Bank instruments (DPOs and IPFs) across selected financial viability targets. It identifies lessons for each sector and cross-cutting lessons for both energy and water operations centered on promoting financial and operational discipline (regardless of private or public ownership), and institutional governance and accountability.
format Report
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Public Utility Reform : What Lessons Can We Learn from IEG Evaluations in the Energy and Water Sectors?
title_short Public Utility Reform : What Lessons Can We Learn from IEG Evaluations in the Energy and Water Sectors?
title_full Public Utility Reform : What Lessons Can We Learn from IEG Evaluations in the Energy and Water Sectors?
title_fullStr Public Utility Reform : What Lessons Can We Learn from IEG Evaluations in the Energy and Water Sectors?
title_full_unstemmed Public Utility Reform : What Lessons Can We Learn from IEG Evaluations in the Energy and Water Sectors?
title_sort public utility reform : what lessons can we learn from ieg evaluations in the energy and water sectors?
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2021
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/681351607013294306/Public-Utility-Reform-What-lessons-can-we-learn-from-IEG-evaluations-in-the-energy-and-water-sectors
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35076
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