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Table 3 and 4 integrity and accounting options
Table 5: Experienced and modeled costs of integrating wind power, euro per MWh of wind power*
"... In PAGE 33: ... Also, improving available wind forecasts and the models operated by grid operators that implement the resultant data are identified as a priority area for improving the cost performance of wind power. Table5 (adapted from IEA 2005:214) presents an overview of the different costs for system integration of wind power that have been presented above. It has to be borne in mind that these numbers are highly dependent on the specific circumstances in each region, including geographical and climatic conditions, the state of existing electricity grids and available technologies and the precise market design.... ..."
Table 2. Six forms of accountability
"... In PAGE 36: ... These demands for greater efficiency, responsiveness and integrity in the management of public affairs have also been abetted by the ICT revolution, which has allowed for the creation of new institutional forms, relationships and networks. Table2 identifies six forms of accountability: political, administrative, personal, professional, output and deliberative. Each one of them has its own defining features and spe- cial mechanisms for implementation.... ..."
Table 4: Comparison of Integration Savings.
1993
"... In PAGE 12: ... To verify that we have accounted for the most important factors in improved performance, we compared the time saved by integrating to the time taken by loops that simply load and/or store one word of data per iteration. The results are presented in Table4 , which for the sake of brevity, contains results for the DecStation only. These particular combinations of data manipulations give one example each of eliminating a load, a load and a store, and two loads and a store.... ..."
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Table 1. 6It is actually an artefact, due to the truncation of =1=R2 series. In fact close to that point the steepest descent method is not applicable if we truncate the gauge action to order O( 3), because there is no large parameter in the exponent. However the O( 4) term is nonzero at =1=4 and if we take it into account, the integral will be nite. In this case, however, we have 4 saddle points, and we have the di culty of de ning the integral so that no spurious ones contribute to it. 7Note that for small Nf the results are unreliable because the condition Nf gt; gt; 1isnottrue; those are shown for comparison only. Note also that we have not attempted to integrate over the instanton sizes, because that cannot be done without introducing a particular assumptions about the mechanism of the cuto at large sizes.
1997
Table 1 gives an overview of the number of clients, accounts and the average number of accounts each client owns.
"... In PAGE 5: ...01 TESS Account 91,238 IPS Client 6,932 26.86 IPS Account 168,247 CTL 38,320 Table1 : Statistics about the relations As the project has evolved, so has the requirements and implementa- tion. Initially, the CRU development team cross-referenced three systems, IPS, TESS, and CTL, and addressed the requirement to provide warnings about data integrity problems.... ..."
Table 1 Integrated routing lookup table. The controller maintains the state of network conditions between distributors and of application-level processing costs within each distributor. Unlike traditional network elements, distributors introduce content processing overheads that must be accounted for during the routing of path segments and distribution paths.
"... In PAGE 13: ... New ways are needed to represent and integrate application and network costs into the rerouting of distribution paths across the overlay. Table1 illustrates one approach for the Table 2 Capability lookup table.... ..."
Table 3: Characteristics of carbon accounting systems (from Nilsson, 1999)
"... In PAGE 18: ..., (1999) as a full carbon budget that encompasses and integrates all (carbon-related) components of all terrestrial ecosystems and is applied continuously in time (past, present and future). It is, in contrast to partial carbon accounting as promoted by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), a holistic approach (see Table3 for comparison). For more details on full carbon accounting see Jonas... ..."
Table 1: IT assets and IT-enabled policy outcome/impact of the CR system before IT integration
2005
"... In PAGE 5: ... Tables 1 and 2, below, outline an illustrative evaluation of the possible policy effects of the CR+CRI system (CR before and after IT integration). Table1 outlines the CR system pre-IT integration. Table 2 takes into account the CR system post-IT integration with SEAP, i.... ..."
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Table 1 A simplified accounting structure for a developing economy
"... In PAGE 18: ...Table1... In PAGE 18: ...Table1... In PAGE 19: ... The empirical disaggregation is conditional on data availability, for example from integrated household surveys. The st andard procedure is to use the intersectoral financial flows, presented in Table1 , to generate behavioural equations about consumption, saving and investment. Financial constraints, such as the government budget constraint and the foreign exchange constraint, can also be carefully captured using the framework.... In PAGE 19: ... Financial constraints, such as the government budget constraint and the foreign exchange constraint, can also be carefully captured using the framework. 3 Basing on Table1 , Murinde (1996, Ch. 2) uses country specific data, from published national accounts, to construct empirical intersectoral financial flow tables for a number of developing countries including Kenya for 1991 4 and Zimbabwe for 1987.... In PAGE 20: ... 5 For flow of funds analysis, like in most applied work in national accounting economics, two components of the SNA are particularly relevant. The first is the capital 4 For particular aspects of financial development, Table1 is more helpful than the analysis in IMF (1981) for Kenya; however, IMF (1981) is more useful in incorporating fiscal aspects of the economy. 5 Dawson (1991) carefully shows the conceptual relation of flow of funds accounts to the SNA.... In PAGE 21: ... It provides a breakdown of net lending (or the balancing item of the capital accumulation account). Nevertheless, in some detail, the SNA differs from the accounting framework in Table1 . The main difference between the two frameworks is that the former clearly distinguishes between its two component account while these accounts are not explicit in Table 1.... In PAGE 21: ... Nevertheless, in some detail, the SNA differs from the accounting framework in Table 1. The main difference between the two frameworks is that the former clearly distinguishes between its two component account while these accounts are not explicit in Table1 . SNA data may therefore allow extra mileage in capturing intersectoral financial flows.... ..."
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