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  • Compare the Costs and Benefits of Investing in an Industrialized Economy to the Cost and Benefits of Investing in a Developing Economy from the Standpoint of a Multinational Enterprises

     

    Essays1 Economics, Business

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ID number:226487
 
Evaluation:
Published: 05.12.2005.
Language: English
Level: Secondary school
Literature: n/a
References: Not used
Extract

Before the 1980s, the only widely used renewable electricity technology was hydropower. Hydropower is still the most significant source of renewable energy, producing 20 percent of the world's electricity and 10 percent of that of the United States. The 1973 oil crisis awoke the country to its vulnerability through dependence on foreign oil. Subsequent changes in federal policy spurred the development of renewable technologies other than hydro.
In 1978, Congress passed the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act (PURPA), which required utilities to purchase electricity from renewable generators and from co generators (which produce combined heat and power, usually using natural gas) when it was less expensive than electric utilities could generate themselves. (Gramlich, Edward M 1990)
Some states, especially California and those in the Northeast, required utilities to sign contracts for renewable whenever electricity from those sources was expected to be cheaper over the long term than electricity from traditional sources. …

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