Books on the topic 'Distribution of total power consumption'

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1

Randolph, John. Virginia energy patterns and trends: Production, distribution, marketing, consumption. Richmond, Va. (2201 West Broad Street, Richmond 23220): The Department, 1987.

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2

Nakhooda, Smita. Empowering people: A governance analysis of electricity. Washington, DC: World Resources Institute, 2007.

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3

Empowering people: A governance analysis of electricity. Washington, DC: World Resources Institute, 2007.

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4

Prévost, Pierre. Atlas énergétique du Québec. [Québec: Direction des communications du Ministère de l'énergie et des ressources du Québec, 1989.

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5

Prévost, Pierre. Québec energy atlas. Québec: [Direction des communications, Ministère de l'énergie et des ressources], 1989.

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6

Rainery, Richard. Alaska's public energy resources: Distribution of benefits of thermal energy and electric power energy resource consumption. [Juneau?]: Rural Research Agency, Alaska State Senate, 1985.

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7

Council of Power Utilities (New Delhi, India), ed. Regulatory intervention for AMR technology & regulatory issues for generating companies. New Delhi: Council of Power Utilities, 2010.

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8

Association pour l'histoire de l'électricité en France. Colloque. Réseaux électriques et installateurs: Actes du 8e colloque de l'AHEF, 14-16 octobre 1992, Paris, Espace Electra. Paris: Association pour l'histoire de l'électricité en France, 1995.

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9

Brazil. Grupo Coordenador do Planejamento dos Sistemas Elétricos. Plano decenal de expansão, 1997-2006. RJ [i.e. Rio de Janeiro]: Eletrobrás, 1996.

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10

Ryder, Gráinne. Powering 21st century Cambodia with decentralized generation: A primer for rethinking Cambodia's electricity future. Phnom Penh, Cambodia: NGO Forum on Cambodia, 2009.

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11

Stiphout, Henricus Adrianus van. Tussen loyaliteit en satisfactie in de consumptiemaatschappij: Een verhandeling over de verenigbaarheid van een prestatiemaatschappij en een verzorgingsstaat. 's-Gravenhage: Distributiecentrum Overheidspublicaties, 1988.

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12

Noussan, Michel. The Future of Transport Between Digitalization and Decarbonization: Trends, Strategies and Effects on Energy Consumption. Cham: Springer Nature, 2020.

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13

Carroll, Christopher J. Colorado coal directory 2005: Includes map of coal production and distribution with statistics on electric generation and fuel consumption. Denver, Colo: Colorado Dept. of Natural Resources, Colorado Geological Survey, 2005.

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14

Beaudreau, Bernard C. Energy and organization: Growth and distribution reexamined. Westport, Conn: Greenwood Press, 1998.

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15

Polischuk, Vladimir. Total energy. ru: INFRA-M Academic Publishing LLC., 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.12737/1039242.

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The training manual sets out General issues of energy systems, fundamentals of converting various forms of energy (thermal, nuclear, hydraulic, solar, wind, geothermal, etc.) into electrical energy, explained the device, principles of operation, modes of operation of heat and power generating equipment and the main issues related to the transmission and distribution of electric energy. Designed for students enrolled in the direction "Electro - and heat power engineering".
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16

Taylor, William R. Evaluation of potential energy loss reduction and savings for U.S. Army electrical distribution systems. [Champaign, Ill.]: US Army Corps of Engineers, Construction Engineering Research Laboratories, 1993.

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17

Discussion drafts concerning energy efficiency, smart electricity grid, Energy Policy Act of 2005 Title XVII loan guarantees, and standby loans for coal-to-liquids projects: Hearing before the Subcommittee on Energy and Air Quality of the Committee on Energy and Commerce, House of Representatives, One Hundred Tenth Congress, first session, May 24, 2007. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 2008.

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18

Pocketbook politics: Economic citizenship in twentieth-century America. Princeton, N.J: Princeton University Press, 2004.

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19

Chattopadhyay, Paresh. Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels on Communism. Edited by Stephen A. Smith. Oxford University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199602056.013.002.

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Communism, envisaged as a society of free and equal individuals succeeding capitalism, arises from the latter’s contradictions and is the outcome of the workers’ self-emancipatory revolution, which starts with their gaining political power as the first step in an ongoing process of revolutionary transformation up to the appearance of the new society. The latter is classless, hence stateless, and its mode of production is marked by the absence of private ownership in the means of production, of commodity production, including money, and of wage labour. The new mode of appropriation is collective and the labour of the individual is directly social. As regards the mode of distribution, society itself takes charge of allocating total labour time—dead and living—across the economy and of dividing the total product between production and consumption needs, and of determining the share of personal consumption in proportion to the individual’s share in common labour.
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20

Commission, Maine Public Utilities, Maine. Office of the Public Advocate, and Maine. Office of Energy Independence and Security, eds. Report on revenue decoupling for transmission & distribution utilities: Presented to the Utilities & Energy Committee. [Augusta, Me.?: Maine Public Utilities Commission ?], 2008.

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21

Outlook for Electricity Markets, 2005-2006. Canadian Government Publishing, 2005.

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22

Economic behaviour model and voltage pattern (macrosoft protocol base). Cambridge : Melrose Books: Simon & Schuster, 2007.

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23

Energia Elétrica em Debate. UFRGS, 2003.

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24

Jacobs, Meg. Pocketbook Politics: Economic Citizenship in Twentieth-Century America (Politics and Society in Twentieth Century America). Princeton University Press, 2007.

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25

Gelman, Andrew, and Deborah Nolan. Statistical inference. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198785699.003.0009.

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This chapter begins with a very successful demonstration that illustrates many of the general principles of statistical inference, including estimation, bias, and the concept of the sampling distribution. Students each take a “random” sample of different size candies, weigh them, and estimate the total weight of all candies. Then various demonstrations and examples are presented that take the students on the transition from probability to hypothesis testing, confidence intervals, and more advanced concepts such as statistical power and multiple comparisons. These activities include use an inflatable globe, short-term memory test, first digits of street addresses, and simulated student IQs.
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26

Romsom, Etienne, and Kathryn McPhail. Capturing economic and social value from hydrocarbon gas flaring: evaluation of the issues. 5th ed. UNU-WIDER, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.35188/unu-wider/2021/939-6.

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Atmospheric emissions urgently need to reduce for natural gas to fulfill its potential role in the energy transition to achieve the Paris Agreement on climate change. This paper establishes the magnitude and trends of flaring and venting in oil and gas operations, as well as their emissions and impact on air quality, health, and climate. While global flaring and venting comprise 7.5 per cent of natural gas produced, their combined impact on health and climate (in terms of Social Cost of Atmospheric Release) accounts for 54 per cent. Many low- and middle-income countries are economically dependent on oil and gas production. Most premature deaths from air pollution in 2016 were in developing countries. Most natural gas losses and emissions are avoidable. If all natural gas flared and vented globally is captured and brought to market, it could supply annually more than the total South and Central America gas consumption, plus all of Africa’s power needs. If 75 per cent of these volumes are captured, it provides an additional natural gas sales value of US$36 billion per annum (assuming an average gas price of US$4/MMBtu).
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27

Borras, Saturnino M., and Jennifer C. Franco. Food, Justice, and Land. Edited by Ronald J. Herring. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780195397772.013.028.

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The politics of food is intertwined with land politics, whether we talk about plantation workers, indigenous peoples, or pastoralists and their desire to own or control land. Questions on food politics are centered on what is to be produced, where, how much and how, by whom, and with what patterns of distribution and consumption. Answers to these questions inevitably raise issues of politics, power, and social justice. This chapter examines the link between land and food and its implications for social justice. It begins with a discussion of the contemporary global land rush in relation to pro-poor land policy, with particular emphasis on land reform. It then looks at the move away from conventional land reform in development policy thinking as part of the neoliberal resurgence. It also considers the contemporary interest in land and land policies in the context of development, along with key themes in pro-poor land policy such as protection or transfer of land-based wealth in favor of the poor, transfer of land-based political power, the sensitivity of such a policy to gender and ethnic groups, and its contribution to increasing land and labor productivity.
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28

Counihan, Carole. Gendering Food. Edited by Jeffrey M. Pilcher. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199729937.013.0006.

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One of the central questions in feminism is whether gender matters. In the case of food activism, gender is also a controversial issue. In particular, one may ask how foodways—the beliefs and behaviors surrounding food production, distribution, and consumption—constrain and empower men and women to become political actors, or how gender power and identity are enacted in food activism. In this article, the author reviews the literature on food and gender and examines how gender can enlighten the study of food activism. She draws on her own ethnographic research on food, culture, and gender in Sardinia and Florence in Italy, and in Pennsylvania and Colorado in the United States. Using a food-centered life history methodology, the author has investigated people's depictions of the role of food in their lives. Her findings show that women use food as a medium to talk about their experiences, their cultures, and their beliefs. Thus, food allows the public to become aware of lives that would otherwise go unnoticed—the lives of ordinary women.
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29

Thomson, C. Claire. We are a Little Land: Informational Film and Small-nation Cinema. Edinburgh University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474424134.003.0003.

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Et lille land’ - a little land - is a trope of Danish identity which recurs in many of the short informational films about Denmark made from the 1930s to the 1960s. This chapter outlines why the notion of Denmark as a small country has historically been fundamental to the nation’s self-understanding as an imagined community, and how and why it has been employed in informational films made for domestic and foreign consumption. The chapter discusses the role of film in the national imagination, and the importance of medium-specific qualities in that process of imagining: for the purposes of this book, such qualities include the films’ shortness, which impacts on narrative as well as distribution and exhibition. The chapter then discusses recent scholarship on ‘small-nation’ cinema, especially in the Nordic region, and the place of informational filmmaking within the small-nation context. A final chapter section outlines a further body of scholarship on cultural diplomacy, soft power, and nation-branding in the Nordic region as a framework for understanding how images (including informational films) move across borders and re-negotiate auto- and xenostereotypes.
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