Policy Options for Stabilizing Global Climate, Draft Report to Congress, February1989, VII-20.
2.
Washington Post Article September 23, 1989, Data supplied by Jim MacKenzie, World Resources Institute, Washington, DC.
3.
World Power: Ready for robust growth, Electrical World, July1989, p. 35.
4.
Implications of Global Climate Policies, Center for Strategic and International Studies, Washington, DC, June 27, 1989, p. 4.
5.
Implications of Global Climate Policies, Center for Strategic and International Studies, Washington, DC, June 27, 1989, p. 4
6.
Power Shortages In Developing Countries: Magnitude, Impacts, Solutions, and the Role Of The Private Sector, U.S. Agency for International Development, Washington, DC. p. iii.
7.
Power Shortages In Developing Countries: Magnitude, Impacts, Solutions, and the Role Of The Private Sector, U.S. Agency for International Development, Washington, DC p. vi
8.
Scott BushF., visiting fellow in environmental affairs at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, Caution on the Carbon Tax, Editorial/OpinionJournal of Commerce, September 6, 1989.
9.
Dr. RalphM. Perhac, Senior Scientific Advisor - Environment, Electric Power Research Institute, The First U.S. Energy Association Global Climate Change Forum, November 21, 1989.
10.
LarryHobart, Efficiency, Environment Focal Points for Utilities, Forum for Applied Research and Public Policy, Spring1989, p. 66.
11.
Implications of Global Climate Change, p. 4.
12.
Power Shortages In Developing Countries, p. 7.
13.
Dr. Subruto, Oil in the 1990s: another challenge to international security, OPEC bulletin, July/August1989, p. 13.