Serbia and Montenegro

The specific objectives of this Country Environmental Analysis (CEA) are to: 1) Review the existing situation in the sector, identify priority areas for policy changes or investments, and consider the role of the government, the private sector, and donors in implementing this agenda 2) Assess macroeconomic-environmental linkages and measures that affect long-term sustainability and financial viability within the priority areas 3) Provide a basis for defining the Bank's future involvement in the sector. The following environmental issues have been identified as critical, based on the negative impact of the current environmental conditions on human health, the economy, and natural ecosystems: Deteriorating trends in water, sanitation, and waste management; threat of coastal zone deterioration; air pollution hot spots; energy inefficiency; excessive industrial pollution; weak environmental management system, institutionally and legally; economic instruments that are more geared to revenue generation than to providing incentives for environmentally responsible behavior; quality and quantity of water resources; transboundary water and global environmental issues; and lack of sustainable forest management. The report recommends improving waste management, particularly hazardous waste; increasing provision of basic water and sanitation services to urban and rural poor; addressing environmental hot spots; strengthening institutional capacity for environmental management; preparing a coastal zone strategy; including in the environmental assessment potential liabilities in the advent of privatization; introducing measures to enhance energy efficiency and use renewable energy sources; instituting measures to reduce nutrient run-off to the Danube; preparing a biodiversity strategy, identifying threatened species, and preparing an action plan; and preparing a management plan for Lake Skadar and introducing environmentally friendly natural resource use practices.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English,Russian
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2003-02
Subjects:MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS, ENERGY PRICES, WATER TARIFF, ENVIRONMENTAL EXPENDITURE, AIR POLLUTION, WATER AND SANITATION, WASTE MANAGEMENT, SOLID WASTE, COASTAL ZONE MANAGEMENT, FORESTRY, BIODIVERSITY, DONOR COORDINATION,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/490501468777607431/Main-report
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/33920
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-okr-1098633920
record_format koha
spelling dig-okr-10986339202024-08-08T17:35:51Z Serbia and Montenegro A Country Environmental Analysis World Bank MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS ENERGY PRICES WATER TARIFF ENVIRONMENTAL EXPENDITURE AIR POLLUTION WATER AND SANITATION WASTE MANAGEMENT SOLID WASTE COASTAL ZONE MANAGEMENT FORESTRY BIODIVERSITY DONOR COORDINATION The specific objectives of this Country Environmental Analysis (CEA) are to: 1) Review the existing situation in the sector, identify priority areas for policy changes or investments, and consider the role of the government, the private sector, and donors in implementing this agenda 2) Assess macroeconomic-environmental linkages and measures that affect long-term sustainability and financial viability within the priority areas 3) Provide a basis for defining the Bank's future involvement in the sector. The following environmental issues have been identified as critical, based on the negative impact of the current environmental conditions on human health, the economy, and natural ecosystems: Deteriorating trends in water, sanitation, and waste management; threat of coastal zone deterioration; air pollution hot spots; energy inefficiency; excessive industrial pollution; weak environmental management system, institutionally and legally; economic instruments that are more geared to revenue generation than to providing incentives for environmentally responsible behavior; quality and quantity of water resources; transboundary water and global environmental issues; and lack of sustainable forest management. The report recommends improving waste management, particularly hazardous waste; increasing provision of basic water and sanitation services to urban and rural poor; addressing environmental hot spots; strengthening institutional capacity for environmental management; preparing a coastal zone strategy; including in the environmental assessment potential liabilities in the advent of privatization; introducing measures to enhance energy efficiency and use renewable energy sources; instituting measures to reduce nutrient run-off to the Danube; preparing a biodiversity strategy, identifying threatened species, and preparing an action plan; and preparing a management plan for Lake Skadar and introducing environmentally friendly natural resource use practices. 2020-06-17T13:48:02Z 2020-06-17T13:48:02Z 2003-02 Report Rapport Informe http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/490501468777607431/Main-report https://hdl.handle.net/10986/33920 English,Russian CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf application/pdf World Bank, Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English,Russian
topic MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS
ENERGY PRICES
WATER TARIFF
ENVIRONMENTAL EXPENDITURE
AIR POLLUTION
WATER AND SANITATION
WASTE MANAGEMENT
SOLID WASTE
COASTAL ZONE MANAGEMENT
FORESTRY
BIODIVERSITY
DONOR COORDINATION
MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS
ENERGY PRICES
WATER TARIFF
ENVIRONMENTAL EXPENDITURE
AIR POLLUTION
WATER AND SANITATION
WASTE MANAGEMENT
SOLID WASTE
COASTAL ZONE MANAGEMENT
FORESTRY
BIODIVERSITY
DONOR COORDINATION
spellingShingle MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS
ENERGY PRICES
WATER TARIFF
ENVIRONMENTAL EXPENDITURE
AIR POLLUTION
WATER AND SANITATION
WASTE MANAGEMENT
SOLID WASTE
COASTAL ZONE MANAGEMENT
FORESTRY
BIODIVERSITY
DONOR COORDINATION
MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS
ENERGY PRICES
WATER TARIFF
ENVIRONMENTAL EXPENDITURE
AIR POLLUTION
WATER AND SANITATION
WASTE MANAGEMENT
SOLID WASTE
COASTAL ZONE MANAGEMENT
FORESTRY
BIODIVERSITY
DONOR COORDINATION
World Bank
Serbia and Montenegro
description The specific objectives of this Country Environmental Analysis (CEA) are to: 1) Review the existing situation in the sector, identify priority areas for policy changes or investments, and consider the role of the government, the private sector, and donors in implementing this agenda 2) Assess macroeconomic-environmental linkages and measures that affect long-term sustainability and financial viability within the priority areas 3) Provide a basis for defining the Bank's future involvement in the sector. The following environmental issues have been identified as critical, based on the negative impact of the current environmental conditions on human health, the economy, and natural ecosystems: Deteriorating trends in water, sanitation, and waste management; threat of coastal zone deterioration; air pollution hot spots; energy inefficiency; excessive industrial pollution; weak environmental management system, institutionally and legally; economic instruments that are more geared to revenue generation than to providing incentives for environmentally responsible behavior; quality and quantity of water resources; transboundary water and global environmental issues; and lack of sustainable forest management. The report recommends improving waste management, particularly hazardous waste; increasing provision of basic water and sanitation services to urban and rural poor; addressing environmental hot spots; strengthening institutional capacity for environmental management; preparing a coastal zone strategy; including in the environmental assessment potential liabilities in the advent of privatization; introducing measures to enhance energy efficiency and use renewable energy sources; instituting measures to reduce nutrient run-off to the Danube; preparing a biodiversity strategy, identifying threatened species, and preparing an action plan; and preparing a management plan for Lake Skadar and introducing environmentally friendly natural resource use practices.
format Report
topic_facet MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS
ENERGY PRICES
WATER TARIFF
ENVIRONMENTAL EXPENDITURE
AIR POLLUTION
WATER AND SANITATION
WASTE MANAGEMENT
SOLID WASTE
COASTAL ZONE MANAGEMENT
FORESTRY
BIODIVERSITY
DONOR COORDINATION
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Serbia and Montenegro
title_short Serbia and Montenegro
title_full Serbia and Montenegro
title_fullStr Serbia and Montenegro
title_full_unstemmed Serbia and Montenegro
title_sort serbia and montenegro
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2003-02
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/490501468777607431/Main-report
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/33920
work_keys_str_mv AT worldbank serbiaandmontenegro
AT worldbank acountryenvironmentalanalysis
_version_ 1807160095449022464