This report on Mongolia national low emission stove strategy points out that Mongolia has already set out to achieve access to cleaner, affordable cooking and heating appliances in peri-urban areas of Ulaanbaatar. Despite initial success, a sustainable, clean stove market has not yet been established due to a number of challenges. This success came about with hard efforts. However, the achievements and investments are at risk for a number of factors discussed in this report. The risks are sufficiently serious that they could even reverse hard-won air quality improvements. This report sets out a proposed national low-emission stove strategy for Mongolia. The objective of the strategy is to establish a sustainable market for low emission stoves in Mongolia. The report focuses on clean heating and cooking stoves as well as small water heating boilers used in Ulaanbaatar.
Details
-
Document Date
2015/08/06
-
Document Type
Working Paper
-
Report Number
98418
-
Volume No
1
-
Total Volume(s)
1
-
Country
-
Region
-
Disclosure Date
2015/08/07
-
Disclosure Status
Disclosed
-
Doc Name
Mongolia national low emission stove strategy : completing the transition to a sustainable market for cleaner stoves
-
Keywords
access to modern energy service;ambient air quality standard;Finance & Private Sector;Solar Home System;air pollution reduction;enforcement of standards;public awareness campaign;air pollution abatement;air quality problem;quality assurance mechanism;outdoor air pollution;air pollution mitigation;Access to Electricity;air quality improvement;public policy objective;removal of subsidy;maintenance and repair;repair and maintenance;prices of import;supply of gas;urban pollution;competition among producers;market development approach;reduction in emission;Extended Term Temporary;energy and water;quality control system;international financial institution;central government agency;emission control technology;harmful air pollution;traditional stove;water heating;supply chain;penetration rate;household survey;emission performance;reporting system;short-term measures;health damage;winter season;market transformation;official statistic;market demand;black market;consumer choice;sales service;Population Growth;cold winter;household use;fiscal incentive;program coordination;eligibility criterion;consumer subsidy;abatement measure;market segment;rapid assessment;poor household;cooking stove;fiscal measure;job prospects;strategic objective;verification system;particulate emission;heat exchanger;retaining wall;burning wood;heat service;pilot program;cost elements;analytical approach;cross road;user preference;heating plant;consumer policy;emissions subsidies;thermal efficiency;political support;urban market;urban population;production capacity;pollution level;scientific exchange;scrap metal;inherent risk;local products;management capacity;public fund;international cooperation;user manuals;coal use;public support;product information;household cooking;public health;performance factor;donor agencies;market dynamic;emission laboratory;air cleaner;health benefit;innovative product;electric appliance;electricity tariff;donor community;steel mill;local producer;water system;user behavior;national strategy;financing institution;viable business;budget execution;coordination standard;support policy;licensing system;Donor countries;national policy;funds flow;research institute;funding source;commercial skill;sampling method;civil society;fuel use;Clean Energy;fiscal resource;tax measure;national budget;company tax;national market;transparent standard;high performance;individual household;scale economy;fair competition;retail price;global market;financing plan;Financing plans;arbitrage opportunity;business model;transaction cost;market size;budget resource;support measure;regulatory gap;stakeholder consultation;switching system;financing source;development partner;work spirit;scientific information;efficient road;industrial ecology;international body;ambient concentration;performance criteria;Economic Policy;open competition;central market;freight terminal;government choice;benefit analysis;high energy;fuel alternative;fuel combustion;commercial market;local condition;short period;international knowledge;awareness raising;community engagement;road map;high share;institutional responsibilities;subsidy scheme;administrative region;development cooperation;largest markets;concentration decrease;urban cities;harsh winters;total emissions;behavioral change;
- See More
Downloads
COMPLETE REPORT
Official version of document (may contain signatures, etc)
- Official PDF
- TXT*
- Total Downloads** :
- Download Stats
-
*The text version is uncorrected OCR text and is included solely to benefit users with slow connectivity.
Citation
Mongolia national low emission stove strategy : completing the transition to a sustainable market for cleaner stoves (English). Washington, D.C. : World Bank Group. http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/828791468187733003/Mongolia-national-low-emission-stove-strategy-completing-the-transition-to-a-sustainable-market-for-cleaner-stoves