Katlego Moilwa’s scientific contributions

What is this page?


This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.

Publications (2)


Table 2 . Top 10 bilateral and multilateral donors in Zambia, providing 81% of total ODA Annual average 2010-12, bilateral and multilateral commitments, USD million, constant 2012 prices 
Table 3 . Selected green development co-operation interventions in Zambia 
Figure 3 of 7
Figure 4 of 7
Figure 5 of 7

+2

Green Development Co-operation in Zambia
  • Working Paper
  • Full-text available

December 2014

·

880 Reads

·

3 Citations

·

Shannon Wang

·

Katlego Moilwa

·

Embracing green growth can secure strong, stable and sustainable development. Green growth recognises and integrates the value of natural capital into economic decision-making and development planning, which is critical to avoid natural capital depletion, the worst of climate change and social and national security risks (OECD, 2013). This is particularly true for developing countries, because of their dependence on natural assets and acute exposure and vulnerability to environmental risks, ranging from air, water and soil pollution, as well as natural resource scarcity and extreme weather events exacerbated by climate change. A green growth policy framework recognises and aims to address both micro- and macro-level pressures that countries face to grow their economies, while also managing environmental risks. In poorer developing countries, micro-level pressures may include lack of access to basic services such as shelter, fuel, water; while macro-level pressures are threats to stable livelihoods due to...

Download

Citations (2)


... Smaller projects, ceteris paribus, and easier to tailor to local conditions and political cultures, and more amenable to exercising greater levels of community oversight and control [63]. The Programme's projects, by contrast, often devote fifteen percent of project development expenditure to legal costs [64]. At the same time, ambitiously low price caps have served to deter effective participation for some technologies, such as landfill gas and biomass, where a smaller scale would have improved the chances of community participation [58]. ...

Reference:

Energy decentralization in South Africa: Why past failure points to future success
Review of Regulators Orientation and Performance: Review of Regulation in Renewable Energy
  • Citing Article
  • January 2014

SSRN Electronic Journal

... Green initiatives have the potential to address socio-economic and environmental challenges and open up new sources of growth (Kanianska, 2017). In Zambia, several initiatives have been undertaken which can be explained as green and have been documented in the literature (for example, Tordoff, 1979;Banda, 2013;Harvey & Mukosha, 2008;Banda & Bass, 2014;Casado-Asensio et al., 2014). One of the earlier initiatives was the "Keep Zambia Clean, Green and Health" programme, launched in 2007 by President Mwanawasa, mainly for the purpose of waste management. ...

Green Development Co-operation in Zambia