Results 21 to 30 of about 59,239,832 (232)

REEDD-CR: Residential electricity end-use demand dataset from Costa Rican households

open access: yesData in Brief, 2023
End-use demand data availability is a catalyst for improving energy efficiency measures and upgrading electricity demand studies. Nevertheless, residential end-use public datasets are limited, and end-use monitoring is costly. The lack of electricity end-
Jam Angulo-Paniagua   +3 more
doaj   +1 more source

Residential electricity consumption and economic growth in Algeria [PDF]

open access: yes, 2018
Within the framework of the COP21 (Conference of the Parties) agreement, Algeria submitted its Intended Nationally Determined Contribution pledging to reduce carbon emissions by at least 7% by 2030.
Bouznit, Mohammed   +2 more
core   +1 more source

Charging Ahead: Prepaid Metering, Electricity Use, and Utility Revenue

open access: yesAmerican Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 2020
Monthly bills for services such as electricity often go unpaid in developing countries. Prepaid meters offer a potential technological solution. In Cape Town, South Africa, over 4,000 residential customers on monthly billing were switched to prepaid ...
K. Jack, Grant Smith
semanticscholar   +1 more source

New perspectives on internet electricity use in 2030

open access: yesEngineering and Applied Science Letters, 2020
The main problems with several existing Information and Communication Technology (ICT) power footprint investigations are: too limited (geographical and temporal) system boundary, overestimation of power saving potential in the next decade, assume that ...
A. Andrae
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Impact of tiered pricing reform on China's residential electricity use

open access: yesChina Economic Quarterly International, 2021
Based on a county-level monthly panel data from four provinces and a province-level monthly panel data from 21 provinces from 2009 to 2015, we use the regression discontinuity method to examine the impacts of the tired pricing reform implemented in July ...
Min Wang, Xiumei Yu
doaj   +1 more source

What Can We Learn from the Household Electricity Survey?

open access: yesBuildings, 2014
The reasons for high carbon emissions from domestic buildings are complex, and have both social and technical dimensions. At the same time, it is costly and very time-consuming to gather reliable data on energy use in the home.
Daniel Godoy-Shimizu   +2 more
doaj   +1 more source

Core Indicators for Determinants and Performance of Electricity Sector in Developing Countries [PDF]

open access: yes, 2004
Since the early 1990s, substantial resources and effort have been spent on implementing market-oriented electricity reform in developing countries. Important sectoral, economic, and social dimensions are involved in electricity reform, but empirical ...
Jamasb, Tooraj   +2 more
core   +1 more source

Hypotheses for Primary Energy Use, Electricity Use and CΟ2 Emissions of Global Computing and Its Shares of the Total Between 2020 and 2030

open access: yesWSEAS Transactions on power systems, 2020
There is no doubt that the economic and computing activity related to the digital sector will ramp up faster in the present decade than in the last. Moreover, computing infrastructure is one of three major drivers of new electricity use alongsidefuture ...
A. Andrae
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Optimal Time-of-Use Price Strategy With Selecting Customer's Range Based on Cost

open access: yesZhongguo dianli, 2020
The traditional time-of-use price policy ignores the user’s willingness. And the modeling of users’ response behavior does not consider the cost for users’ adjustment of electricity consumption, and the range of users cannot be selected theoretically ...
Jianping HUANG   +5 more
doaj   +1 more source

Utilizing smart-meter data to project impacts of urban warming on residential electricity use for vulnerable populations in Southern California

open access: yesEnvironmental Research Letters, 2020
Extreme heat events are increasing in frequency and intensity, challenging electricity infrastructure due to growing cooling demand and posing public health risks to urbanites. In order to minimize risks from increasing extreme heat, it is critical to (a)
Mo Chen, G. Ban-Weiss, K. Sanders
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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