Strategy for Prioritization of Storage Hydropower Projects - A Case from Nepal
In: International Journal of Management, Technology, and Social Sciences (IJMTS), ISSN: 2581-6012, Vol. 6, No. 2, August 2021
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In: International Journal of Management, Technology, and Social Sciences (IJMTS), ISSN: 2581-6012, Vol. 6, No. 2, August 2021
SSRN
In: Journal of public affairs, Band 22, Heft 3
ISSN: 1479-1854
This research precisely analyzes the delay causes of one of the most delayed hydropower project in Pakistan. In this study, grey relation analysis has been employed which has strong analytical ability, in the process of grey relational analysis calculation, the same weight cannot fully reflect the optimality of evaluation, so we have used the entropy weight method to improve it, at the same time, we have used full information reflected by the evaluation index. The socioeconomic problems which are delaying this project (Diamar‐Basha dam) which include poor resettlement plan for local people, compensation of land, threat of cultural heritage, and ecological impacts of this project. It gives quantitative analysis by taking into account several issues in infrastructural project activities like historical and geographical disputes between local people and Governments, their socioeconomic impacts on affected population due to lack of finance and land use conflicts. The deeper roots behind the excusable delays of construction of the Diamar‐Basha dam are discovered in its true spirit while the putative reasons are decorated how this project get into such a predicament and further delay in construction of dam will make it a mirage project.
In: Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space, Band 35, Heft 2, S. 355-375
ISSN: 2399-6552
Investments in renewable energy have been identified as one mechanism for encouraging development in lagging regions, with community owned or operated facilities potentially having a relatively greater impact. The development of small hydropower installations in Wales is examined to establish the economic and community benefits of such schemes. The sector displays a number of locally beneficial economic characteristics that are absent from larger scale renewable investments. However, this is shown to be a fragile sector dependent on a small number of key individuals and institutions, and with an investment model relying on depreciating UK government subsidies. Following an introduction, the paper first examines why renewables, and small-scale, community renewables in particular, have attracted attention as a part response to declining economic, social and environmental conditions in rural communities. It then describes the Welsh energy and policy context before describing the data and the method employed in the research. The paper then examines the economic value of small hydropower developments, the nature and scale of impacts on local social capital and on communities, and then the extent to which small hydropower might be considered distinct from other local energy sectors in terms of business behaviours and inter-organisation relationships. The discussion then focuses on factors affecting prospects for the small hydropower sector, and which will limit how far development of the sector can lead to transformative outcomes for communities close to the natural resource.
In Theory and practice of social sciences for human wellbeing in South Asia. International Conference on Social Sciences, Sri Lanka 2008 (ICSSL), held at the Research Centre for Social Sciences, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Kelaniya, Sri Lanka, 18-20 July 2008. Kelaniya, Sri Lanka: University of Kelaniya
BASE
In: Contemporary South Asia, Band 20, Heft 1, S. 105-117
ISSN: 1469-364X
In: The China quarterly, Heft 230, S. 464-488
ISSN: 1468-2648
Hydropower dams are back in the spotlight owing to a shifting preference for low carbon energy generation and their possible contribution to mitigating climate change. At the forefront of the renaissance of large hydropower dams are Chinese companies, as the builders of the world's largest dams at home and abroad, opening up opportunities for low- and middle-income countries. However, large hydropower dams, despite their possible developmental and carbon reduction contributions, are accompanied by huge economic costs, profound negative environmental changes and social impacts. Using fieldwork data from four hydropower projects in Ghana, Nigeria, Cambodia and Malaysia, this paper evaluates the behaviour of Chinese stakeholders engaged in large hydropower projects in Asia and Africa. We do this by first exploring the interests of the different Chinese stakeholders and then by investigating the wider implications of these Chinese dams on the local, national and international contexts. The paper concludes that hydropower dams will continue to play a prominent role in future efforts to increase energy security and reduce energy poverty worldwide, therefore the planning, building and mitigation strategies need to be implemented in a more sustainable way that takes into account national development priorities, the needs of local people and the impacts on natural habitats. (China Q/GIGA)
World Affairs Online
In: National Seminar on Safety and Quality Management in Development of Uttranchal at Dehradun, June 24, 2005
SSRN
In: The China quarterly, Band 230, S. 464-488
ISSN: 1468-2648
AbstractHydropower dams are back in the spotlight owing to a shifting preference for low carbon energy generation and their possible contribution to mitigating climate change. At the forefront of the renaissance of large hydropower dams are Chinese companies, as the builders of the world's largest dams at home and abroad, opening up opportunities for low- and middle-income countries. However, large hydropower dams, despite their possible developmental and carbon reduction contributions, are accompanied by huge economic costs, profound negative environmental changes and social impacts. Using fieldwork data from four hydropower projects in Ghana, Nigeria, Cambodia and Malaysia, this paper evaluates the behaviour of Chinese stakeholders engaged in large hydropower projects in Asia and Africa. We do this by first exploring the interests of the different Chinese stakeholders and then by investigating the wider implications of these Chinese dams on the local, national and international contexts. The paper concludes that hydropower dams will continue to play a prominent role in future efforts to increase energy security and reduce energy poverty worldwide, therefore the planning, building and mitigation strategies need to be implemented in a more sustainable way that takes into account national development priorities, the needs of local people and the impacts on natural habitats.
In: Environment & planning: international journal of urban and regional research. C, Government & policy
ISSN: 0263-774X
In: Gender and development, Band 25, Heft 3, S. 455-470
ISSN: 1364-9221
In: Project appraisal: ways, means and experiences, Band 12, Heft 3, S. 185-192
In: Development and change, Band 40, Heft 3, S. 487-507
ISSN: 1467-7660
ABSTRACTThe omnipotence of the World Bank on a global scale means that it is often regarded as the most influential partner in bringing about transformations in developing countries. This article contributes to ongoing discussions of this issue by examining some effects of the Bank's participatory agenda in one of its flagship projects, the Nam Theun 2 (NT2) hydropower scheme in Laos. Critical accounts suggest that the Bank's promotion of participation in donor‐dependent countries like Laos is either a guise or an imposition. These propositions are considered in two settings where participation was debated around the time of the Bank's loan appraisal for NT2: first, an international stakeholders' workshop held in Vientiane; and second, some international attempts to identify the concerns of villagers living near the NT2 dam site. In workshops and villages, participation is a negotiated performance whereby competing representations emerge through the interaction between village, state and international actors. More generally, this article shows that a grounded view of development can attend to the practices that constrain the hegemonic tendencies of the World Bank, even while maintaining awareness of the potency of its policies and interventions.
The Department of Energy's 'new household electrification strategy' allows for any appropriate and affordable technology option to be applied towards achieving South Africa's non-grid electrification target of 300 000 households over the period 2014 to 2025. This paper describes the main legislative and regulatory framework governing the implementation of small-scale hydropower (SHP) projects in South Africa with the aim of attaining the objectives of the non-grid electrification component of the 'new household electrification strategy', and indicates that it is possible to implement such projects within South Africa's complex institutional architecture. The inclusion of run-of-river type small-scale hydropower projects for rural electrification in the 2016 updated General Authorisation eased the process of attaining regulatory compliance in terms the National Water Act. This implies that these types of SHP projects would only need to follow a registration process to obtain the required water use authorisation, and not a full water use licence application process.
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In: New perspectives in Southeast Asian studies
In: United Nations publication
World Affairs Online