Kirde-Eesti, Estonia: Patterns of Socio- Economic Development - Case Study Report
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Lake Peipsi/Chudskoe Basin – Lessons Learned
Lake Peipsi/Chudskoe Lake Peipsi/Chudskoe Basin – Lessons Learned Gulnara Roll, Aija Kosk, Estonian Agricultural University Peeter Unt, Natalia Alexeeva, Peipsi Center for Transboundary Cooperation Introduction Lake Peipsi/Chudsko-Pskovskoe, sometimes called Peipus (further Peipsi), is the fourth largest and the biggest transboundary lake in Europe. Its three names originated from three languages historically used in the region – Peipsi came from Estonian, Chudsko-Pskovskoe from Russian and Peipus has German roots. Lake Peipsi belongs to the water basin of the Narva River (or Narova), a 77 km long watercourse, which connects Lake Peipsi with the Gulf of Finland of the Baltic Sea. Estonian and Russia share the Lake Peipsi and three countries, including Estonia, Russia and Latvia, share Narva River basin. Latvia has only 5% of the water basin and pollution from its territory is very small in the overall pollution load in the basin. What makes the Lake Peipsi specific and different from other great lakes of the world is that it is located on the future European Union border with Russia and is shared by countries in transition. Estonia regained its independence from the Soviet Union in 1991. Before that Lake Peipsi was an internal big lake in the northwest of the Soviet Union where the same legislation, procedures, environmental standards were applied for the whole lake basin and therefore it is a new transboundary lake. With these radical political changes at the beginning of the 1990s, the socio-economic context of water management also changed drastically as existed earlier economic contacts across the lake were disrupted with the establishment of border customs control on the border between Russia and Estonia. -
In the Lands of the Romanovs: an Annotated Bibliography of First-Hand English-Language Accounts of the Russian Empire
ANTHONY CROSS In the Lands of the Romanovs An Annotated Bibliography of First-hand English-language Accounts of The Russian Empire (1613-1917) OpenBook Publishers To access digital resources including: blog posts videos online appendices and to purchase copies of this book in: hardback paperback ebook editions Go to: https://www.openbookpublishers.com/product/268 Open Book Publishers is a non-profit independent initiative. We rely on sales and donations to continue publishing high-quality academic works. In the Lands of the Romanovs An Annotated Bibliography of First-hand English-language Accounts of the Russian Empire (1613-1917) Anthony Cross http://www.openbookpublishers.com © 2014 Anthony Cross The text of this book is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (CC BY 4.0). This license allows you to share, copy, distribute and transmit the text; to adapt it and to make commercial use of it providing that attribution is made to the author (but not in any way that suggests that he endorses you or your use of the work). Attribution should include the following information: Cross, Anthony, In the Land of the Romanovs: An Annotated Bibliography of First-hand English-language Accounts of the Russian Empire (1613-1917), Cambridge, UK: Open Book Publishers, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.11647/ OBP.0042 Please see the list of illustrations for attribution relating to individual images. Every effort has been made to identify and contact copyright holders and any omissions or errors will be corrected if notification is made to the publisher. As for the rights of the images from Wikimedia Commons, please refer to the Wikimedia website (for each image, the link to the relevant page can be found in the list of illustrations). -
International Research and Exchanges Board Records
International Research and Exchanges Board Records A Finding Aid to the Collection in the Library of Congress Prepared by Karen Linn Femia, Michael McElderry, and Karen Stuart with the assistance of Jeffery Bryson, Brian McGuire, Jewel McPherson, and Chanté Wilson-Flowers Manuscript Division Library of Congress Washington, D.C. 2011 International Research and Exchanges Board Records Page ii Collection Summary Title: International Research and Exchanges Board Records Span Dates: 1947-1991 (bulk 1956-1983) ID No: MSS80702 Creator: International Research and Exchanges Board Creator: Inter-University Committee on Travel Grants Extent: 331,000 items; 331 cartons; 397.2 linear feet Language: Collection material in English and Russian Repository: Manuscript Division, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. Abstract: American service organization sponsoring scholarly exchange programs with the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe in the Cold War era. Correspondence, case files, subject files, reports, financial records, printed matter, and other records documenting participants’ personal experiences and research projects as well as the administrative operations, selection process, and collaborative projects of one of America’s principal academic exchange programs. International Research and Exchanges Board Records Page iii Contents Collection Summary .......................................................... ii Administrative Information ......................................................1 Organizational History..........................................................2 -
ANGLO-RUSSIAN DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS 1907-1914 THESIS Presented to the Graduate Council of the North Texas State University In
%41o ANGLO-RUSSIAN DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS 1907-1914 THESIS Presented to the Graduate Council of the North Texas State University in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSPHY By Rosemary C. Tompkins, B.F.A., B.A., M.A. Denton, Texas May, 1975 1975 ROSEMARY COLBOPN TOMWKINS ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Tompkins, Rosemary C., Anglo-Russian Diplomatic Relations, 1907-1914. Doctor of Philosophy (European History), May, 1975, 388 pp., 1 map, bibliography, 370 titles. No one has investigated in detail the totality of Anglo-Russian relations from the Anglo-Russian Convention of 1907 to the outbreak of World War I. Those who have written on the history of the Triple Entente have tended to claim that France was the dominant partner and that her efforts pulled Great Britain and Russia together and kept them together. Britain and Russia had little in common, the standard argument asserts; their ideological and political views were almost diametrically opposed, and furthermore,they had major imperial conflicts. This dissertation tests two hypotheses. The first is that Russia and Britain were drawn together less from French efforts than from a mutual reaction to German policy. The second is that there was less political and ideological friction between Britain and Russia than previous writers have assumed. The first hypothesis has been supported in previous writings only tangentially, while the second has not been tested for the period under review. Studies of the period have been detailed studies on specific events and crises, while this investigation reviews the course of the Anglo- Russian partnership for the entire seven year period. -
Annual Report 2004/05 Major Events at Eesti Energia
annual report 2004/05 Major events at Eesti Energia Organisational changes Highlights of the financial year • 1 April 2004 – OÜ Põhivõrk was established as an independent • Launch of the fluidised bed technology-based power unit legal entity • Application of new electricity tariffs in the Eesti Energia service area • 28 June 2004 – the metal testing company OÜ ER Test Service • Completion of the preparatory work for construction of Estlink, was established the undersea cable connecting the Baltic States and Nordic countries. • 1 July 2004 – OÜ Jaotusvõrk was established as an independent • Elimination of the January 9 storm damage legal entity • Export of a record-breaking volume of electrical energy to Latvia – • 5 July 2004 – AS Kohtla-Järve Soojus’ business units – power plant 1.39 TWh and heat network –were sold • Production and sale of a record-breaking volume of shale oil • Establishment of a fiber-optic connection to improve data Major investment projects communication with Russia • Power units 8 and 11 were completed in Narva Power Plants • Reorganization of strategic planning process • The slope shaft was completed in the Estonia mine • Integration of economic value added (EVA) and balance scorecard • The shale-oil based boilerhouse is put into operation in the Viru mine • Implementation of ISO 14001 environmental management • Chimney No. 5 is reconstructed in the Balti Power Plant standards in AS Narva Elektrijaamad, OÜ Jaotusvõrk, AS Energoremont, • The railway freight car tilting device is reconstructed in the Eesti the Iru Power -
Annual Report 2004/05 Major Events at Eesti Energia
annual report 2004/05 Major events at Eesti Energia Organisational changes Highlights of the financial year • 1 April 2004 – OÜ Põhivõrk was established as an independent • Launch of the fluidised bed technology-based power unit legal entity • Application of new electricity tariffs in the Eesti Energia service area • 28 June 2004 – the metal testing company OÜ ER Test Service • Completion of the preparatory work for construction of Estlink, was established the undersea cable connecting the Baltic States and Nordic countries. • 1 July 2004 – OÜ Jaotusvõrk was established as an independent • Elimination of the January 9 storm damage legal entity • Export of a record-breaking volume of electrical energy to Latvia – • 5 July 2004 – AS Kohtla-Järve Soojus’ business units – power plant 1.39 TWh and heat network –were sold • Production and sale of a record-breaking volume of shale oil • Establishment of a fiber-optic connection to improve data Major investment projects communication with Russia • Power units 8 and 11 were completed in Narva Power Plants • Reorganization of strategic planning process • The slope shaft was completed in the Estonia mine • Integration of economic value added (EVA) and balance scorecard • The shale-oil based boilerhouse is put into operation in the Viru mine • Implementation of ISO 14001 environmental management • Chimney No. 5 is reconstructed in the Balti Power Plant standards in AS Narva Elektrijaamad, OÜ Jaotusvõrk, AS Energoremont, • The railway freight car tilting device is reconstructed in the Eesti the Iru Power -
Estonian Electricity System Security of Supply Report 2019
ESTONIAN ELECTRICITY SYSTEM SECURITY OF SUPPLY REPORT 2019 Tallinn 2019 FOREWORD Where will electricity come from in Estonia in 2030? I have recently often been asked where electricity will come from if the Narva power plants are closed. It is clear that transmission lines do not generate electricity and, to generate electricity, there has to be a power plant somewhere on the same electricity market. In addition, sufficient connections from the power plant to consumption have to be built to transport electricity from and to consumers. Let it immediately be said that the Estonian electricity system has for a long time already no longer only been based on the Narva power plants and, bearing in mind our climate goals, the future of the security of electricity supply in Estonia is not oil shale-fired power plants. Even if the regrettable malfunction at the Balti substation near Narva in May had had an impact on the operation of the power plants of Eesti Energia, it did not pose any risk to the operation of the Estonian electricity system as a whole. The risk of one producer, one power plant, to the security of electricity supply in Estonia has reduced to an acceptable level by today. In Estonia, the consumption has recently been near 800 MW, of which that generated in Narva accounts for approximately 400 MW. Thus, the Estonian consumer’s security of electricity supply has to be analysed considering a more comprehensive picture of electricity generation and transmission lines than only Eesti Energia’s power plants or Estonia. We do that in everyday close cooperation with other electricity suppliers in Europe. -
Development of Electricity Markets – Options for Estonia
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Policy Documentation Center Development of Electricity Markets – Options for Estonia Anton Laur Estonian Institute of Economics at Tallinn Technical University, 7 Estonia Ave., 10143 Tallinn, Estonia fax: 372-6998851, e-mail: [email protected] Sulev Soosaar Estonian Energy Research Institute at Tallinn Technical University, 1 Paldiski Rd., 10137 Tallinn, Estonia fax: 372-6613653, e-mail: [email protected] Koidu Tenno Estonian Institute of Economics at Tallinn Technical University, 7 Estonia Ave., 10143 Tallinn, Estonia fax: 372-6998851, e-mail: [email protected] Abstract This chapter discusses the situation of electricity markets both in the European Union countries and in transition economies. We analyse the possibility of reducing the monopoly of oil shale-based energy production and opening the market in electricity in Estonia. To evaluate the prospects of oil shale-based electricity production, we analyse the formation of the oil shale-based electricity production price today and in the future, focusing on the share and growth of the environmental component in the production price. The environmental costs of oil shale-based electricity production depend primarily on the resource tax and pollution charge rates. We predict considerable growth of these costs, especially in the tax rates of greenhouse gases (mainly CO2) in connection with the tightening of the environmental requirements in the future. Journal of Economic Literature Classification numbers: O21, Q40, Q43, P22, C61, L94. Keywords: energy sector, electricity market, vertical integration, liberalisation, unbundling, oil shale, environmental costs, sustainable development. 2 Acknowledgements The authors would like to thank Prof. -
Conversations with Vladimir Putin, P.69 Back to Text 28
PUTINS PEOPLE How the KGB Took Back Russia and Then Took on the West Catherine Belton Copyright William Collins An imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers 1 London Bridge Street London SE1 9GF WilliamCollinsBooks.com This eBook first published in Great Britain by William Collins in 2020 Copyright © Catherine Belton 2020 Cover photograph © Getty Images Catherine Belton asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e- book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down- loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins Source ISBN: 9780007578795 Ebook Edition © April 2020 ISBN: 9780007578801 Version: 2020-04-29 Dedication To my parents, Marjorie and Derek, as well as to Richard and to Catherine Birkett. Epigraph ‘Russian organised-crime leaders, their members, their associates, are moving into Western Europe, they are purchasing property, they are establishing bank accounts, theyre establishing companies, theyre weaving themselves into the fabric of society, and by the time that Europe develops an awareness its going to be too late. Former FBI special agent Bob Levinson ‘I want to warn Americans. As a people, you are very naïve about Russia and its intentions. -
Editor's Page
Oil Shale, 2012, Vol. 29, No. 3, pp. 203–205 ISSN 0208-189X doi: 10.3176/oil.2012.3.01 © 2012 Estonian Academy Publishers EDITOR’S PAGE NEW TRENDS IN ESTONIAN OIL SHALE INDUSTRY Energy crisis is visible. It is difficult to pay attention to anything else when we do not have the energy we need. It drives economic growth all over the world; it gives us comfort and security. The ever worsening availability of traditional energy sources, as well as the growth of energy prices and world energy consumption have generated global interest in oil shale resources for oil and power production. Oil shale deposits range from the Early Palaeozoic to the Cenozoic in age and its reserves in the world are immense, exceeding the resources of other solid fuels (coal, lignite, brown coal) everything taken together. Total shale oil resources are estimated to be 3.2 billion barrels, more than three times higher than the proven conven- tional oil reserves. We cannot afford energy at any cost. It means that we have to ensure that we take good care of the environment as well as society together. World oil shale science and technology have a long history, however, with consider- able ups and downs. Depletion of oil reserves and emphasis on energy security can be expected to give an impetus to much wider and more complex oil shale research in the near future. The role of oil shale is very important in Estonian economy, particularly in employment and regional development. The oil shale industry accounts for 4% of Estonia’s gross domestic product. -
Annual Report 2019
1 ESTONIAN COMPETITION AUTHORITY Tatari 39 10134 Tallinn Phone: (+372) 667 2400 [email protected] www.konkurentsiamet.ee Director General Märt Ots [email protected] Head of Competition Division-Deputy Director General Kristel Rõõmusaar [email protected] Head of Regulatory Division-Deputy Director General Marilin Tilkson [email protected] Head of External and Public Relations Maarja Uulits [email protected] 2 Contents ABOUT THE AUTHORITY ............................................................................................. 4 COOPERATION .......................................................................................................... 5 COMPETITION SUPERVISION ....................................................................................... 8 The obligation offered by Piletilevi facilitates the use of several ticket intermediaries by the event organizer ................................................................................................................... 8 The Supreme Court took a position on the application of the Competition Act in the waste management sector ............................................................................................................ 9 Recommendation for opening notary fees to price competition .......................................... 10 Competition in granting 5G frequency licences .................................................................. 10 Compromise with the Estonian Broadband Foundation -
Estonian Review E E S T I R I N G V a a D E VOLUME 16 NO 39 OCT 4 - 10, 2006
Estonian Review E E S T I R I N G V A A D E VOLUME 16 NO 39 OCT 4 - 10, 2006 ESTONIA’S NEW PRESIDENT SWORN IN Ilves: Estonia's Future Is in Its Citizens' Hands Oct 9 – In his inaugural address, President Toomas Hendrik Ilves said that by the end of his term, Estonia must become a state determined by all Estonians, with no vestiges remaining of the Soviet occupation. "In five years we should hand over to the first generation brought up in newly independent Estonia a state, which will look and perform as if there had never been any occupation, the president said before parliament. “Naturally, we cannot abolish fifty years of occupation. However, a generation – twenty years – is a period for us to judge whether we coped or not? Have we made Estonia greater, better, safer and more homelike?” Ilves said the Estonian state is the proactive creation of its citizens, not of foreign powers and international bodies. "At any given moment our country is a work of art created by us, citizens, not by Moscow, Brussels or the International Monetary Fund. No private individual, government, party or company has founded our country. It is we ourselves, each and every one of us, every day that boldly and surely have to shape Estonia." Ilves said that those to whom the people have entrusted leadership and responsibility must act for the sake of the citizens. He also spoke about coming to terms with the past. “If we would like to leave to the generation born in independent Estonia a mentally healthy state, we should not apply the past as a cudgel.