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Restructuring Russia's Electricity Sector [electronic resource]: Towards Effective Competition or Faux Liberalisation? / William Tompson = La restructuration du secteur de l'électricité : Vers une véritable concurrence ou une fausse libéralisation? / William Tompson

By: Material type: ArticleArticleSeries: OECD Economics Department Working Papers ; no.403.Publication details: Paris : OECD Publishing, 2004.Description: 34 p. ; 21 x 29.7cmOther title:
  • La restructuration du secteur de l'électricité Vers une véritable concurrence ou une fausse libéralisation?
Subject(s): Other classification:
  • P28
  • P31
  • L94
  • O52
Online resources: Abstract: Russia in 2003 embarked on the restructuring of its electricity sector. The reform is intended to introduce competition into electricity production and supply, leaving dispatch, transmission and distribution as regulated natural monopolies with non-discriminatory third-party access to the networks. The ultimate aim of the reform is to create conditions that will encourage both investment in new capacity and greater efficiency of both production and consumption. The overall approach embodied in the reform is promising. However, there remains a serious risk that its aims could be subverted by special-interest lobbying during the lengthy implementation phase. If the reform is to succeed, the marketised segments of the sector must be characterised by real competition based on economically meaningful prices. There are two dangers here. The first is that private-sector interests will secure strategic holdings that allow them to exercise market power or even local monopoly power. The ...
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Item type Home library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Working Paper Biblioteca Digital Colección OECD OECD 271755770050 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not For Loan
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Russia in 2003 embarked on the restructuring of its electricity sector. The reform is intended to introduce competition into electricity production and supply, leaving dispatch, transmission and distribution as regulated natural monopolies with non-discriminatory third-party access to the networks. The ultimate aim of the reform is to create conditions that will encourage both investment in new capacity and greater efficiency of both production and consumption. The overall approach embodied in the reform is promising. However, there remains a serious risk that its aims could be subverted by special-interest lobbying during the lengthy implementation phase. If the reform is to succeed, the marketised segments of the sector must be characterised by real competition based on economically meaningful prices. There are two dangers here. The first is that private-sector interests will secure strategic holdings that allow them to exercise market power or even local monopoly power. The ...

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