Private Participation in the Transmission and Distribution of Natural Gas : Recent Trends

This paper examines the increasing participation of the private sector in the transmission and distribution of natural gas in developing countries during the 1990s, resulting mainly from the growing demand for new gas transport facilities coinciding with a growing consensus in favor of private participation in infrastructure. This note, drawing on the bank's PPI (Private Participation in Infrastructure) Project database, provides an overview of the patterns and trends in the projects in the twenty six developing countries which introduced private participation in natural gas between 1990 and 1997. It concludes with the thought that growth in privately funded and operated export projects promise s to bring the economic and environmental benefits of natural gas to a larger number of countries.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Izaguirre, Ada Karina
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 1999-04
Subjects:COMPETITIVE MARKETS, CONSTRUCTION, DISTRIBUTION ASSETS, ELECTRICITY SECTOR, ENERGY DEMAND, ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS, GAS, GAS COMPANIES, GAS COMPANY, GAS DISTRIBUTION, GAS FIELDS, GAS INDUSTRY, GAS MARKETS, GAS NETWORK, GAS NETWORKS, GAS PIPELINE, GAS PLANTS, GAS RESOURCES, GAS SECTORS, GAS TARIFFS, GAS TRANSMISSION, GAS TRANSPORT, GAS UTILITIES, INTERNATIONAL GAS TRADE, LIQUEFIED NATURAL GAS, NATURAL GAS, NATURAL GAS DISTRIBUTION, NATURAL GAS FACILITIES, NATURAL GAS INDUSTRY, NATURAL GAS MARKETS, NATURAL GAS PROJECTS, NATURAL GAS RESERVES, NATURAL GAS RESOURCES, NATURAL GAS SECTOR, NATURAL GAS SUPPLY, NATURAL GAS TRANSPORT, NATURAL GAS UTILITIES, PIPE- LINE, PIPELINE, PIPELINE PROJECTS, PIPELINES, TRANSMISSION SYSTEM NATURAL GAS TRANSPORTATION, TRANSMISSION, DISTRIBUTION & TRANSMISSION, GREENFIELD PROJECTS, EXPORT ORIENTED PROJECTS, NATURAL GAS PIPELINES,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/1999/04/438995/private-participation-transmission-distribution-natural-gas-recent-trends
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/11483
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Summary:This paper examines the increasing participation of the private sector in the transmission and distribution of natural gas in developing countries during the 1990s, resulting mainly from the growing demand for new gas transport facilities coinciding with a growing consensus in favor of private participation in infrastructure. This note, drawing on the bank's PPI (Private Participation in Infrastructure) Project database, provides an overview of the patterns and trends in the projects in the twenty six developing countries which introduced private participation in natural gas between 1990 and 1997. It concludes with the thought that growth in privately funded and operated export projects promise s to bring the economic and environmental benefits of natural gas to a larger number of countries.