Lebanon Energy Situation

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Revision as of 14:19, 5 March 2012 by ***** (***** | *****)

Overview

Lebanese Republic
 
 

Capital

Beirut (33°54′N 35°32′E)

Official language(s)

Arabic, French (conditional)

Government

Confessionalist, parliamentary republic

President

Michel Suleiman

Prime Minister

Najib Mikati

Total area

10,452 km2

Population

4,224,000 (2009 estimate)

GDP (nominal)

$58.576 billion

GDP Per capita

$14,988

Currency

Lebanese pound (LBP)

Time zone

EET (UTC+2)

Calling code

+961

Energy situation

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Energy Supply

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Electricity

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Energy Consumption

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Energy demand

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Electricity

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Access rate

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Market situation for different energy technologies and services

Solar Energy

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Wind Energy

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Biomass

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Biogas

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Hydro Power

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Other renewable Sources

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Key problems of the energy sector

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Policy framework, laws and regulations

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General Energy policy, Energy strategy

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Important Laws and regulations

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Specific strategies (Biomass, renewable energies, rural electrification, energy access strategy etc.)

The Lebanese Center for Energy Conservation (LCEC) has published the National Energy Effciency Action Plan (NEEAP) 2011-2015 in February 2012.[1] It presents 14 initiatives to increase energy efficiency across sectors. The initiatives include also the promotion of electricity generation by renewable energies (solar, wind, hydro, geothermal, waste to energy etc.). The NEEAP sets out the following targets: the growth rate of electricity consumption across sectors (industry, buildings, government, others & losses) should be reduced by 5% in 2020 compared to the base year 2010. This should result in a reduced energy intensity of 0.42 kWh/$ in 2020 compared to 0.44 in 2010.

Institutional set up in the energy sector

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Governmental institutions Private sector (enterprises, NGOs)

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Activities of other donors, activities of NGOs

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Existing projects

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Publications

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External links