Partnership for Market Readiness2015-04-292015-04-292013-05https://hdl.handle.net/10986/21828The Partnership for Market Readiness (PMR) is a global partnership, which provides funding and technical assistance to support the design and development of market-based instruments to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. The PMR is country-led and builds on countries own mitigation priorities. It emphasizes improving technical and institutional capacity to scale up mitigation efforts, including domestic emissions trading, crediting mechanisms and carbon taxes, among others. The report contains three parts. First, it provides an overview of the types of data management systems included in this analysis, namely, systems that support: (1) national level inventories, (2) facility-level reporting, and (3) carbon asset registries as well as other systems for clean energy and energy efficiency policies. The first part also provides a snapshot of four cases studies (the United Kingdom, Australia, the United States, Germany; Annexes to this report includes full descriptions of the case studies). Secondly, the report presents lessons learned from the case studies, and derives a number of key considerations for designing and developing data management systems. Finally, it proposes design principles that PMR partner countries may find useful when implementing GHG data management systems of their own.en-USCC BY 3.0 IGOAIRAIR EMISSIONSAIR POLLUTANTSAIR POLLUTIONALLOCATIONALLOWANCEALLOWANCESANNUAL REPORTANNUAL REPORTSATMOSPHEREAUCTIONSAUTHENTICATIONAUTHENTICATIONSAUTOMATIONBEST PRACTICEBUSINESS INFORMATIONBUSINESS SYSTEMSCALCULATIONCAPACITY BUILDINGCARBCARBONCARBON ACCOUNTINGCARBON BUDGETSCARBON CREDITSCARBON EMISSIONSCARBON MARKETCARBON POOLSCARBON TAXESCERTIFICATECLEAN ENERGYCLIMATECLIMATE CHANGECLIMATE CHANGE LEVYCLIMATE POLICYCO2CODINGCOLLECTION OF DATACOMBUSTIONCOMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGYCOMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGYCOMPONENTSCOMPUTERSCONFIDENTIALITYCONTENTSDATA ELEMENTSDATA ENTRYDATA INTEGRITYDATA MANAGEMENTDATA PROCESSINGDATA REPORTINGDATA SECURITYDATA SOURCESDATA STORAGEDATA STRUCTUREDATA STRUCTURESDATA SUBMISSIONDATABASE INFORMATIONDATABASE SYSTEMDESCRIPTIONDESCRIPTIONSDEVICESDIGESTDOCUMENTSDOMESTIC EMISSIONSELECTRICITYELECTRICITY CONSUMPTIONELECTRONIC DATAELECTRONIC FORMELECTRONIC SIGNATUREELECTRONIC TOOLSEMISSIONEMISSION FACTORSEMISSIONSEMISSIONS DATAEMISSIONS FACTORSEMISSIONS FROM ENERGY PRODUCTIONEMISSIONS FROM LAND USEEMISSIONS LEVELSEMISSIONS MITIGATIONEMISSIONS TRENDSEND USEREND USERSENERGY BALANCEENERGY CONSUMPTIONENERGY DATAENERGY EFFICIENCYENERGY EFFICIENCY PROGRAMSENERGY PRODUCTIONENERGY USEENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTIONEQUIPMENTEXCHANGE OF INFORMATIONEXTENSIBLE MARKUP LANGUAGEFILE FORMATSFINANCIAL CONSTRAINTSFINANCIAL SYSTEMSFORESTRYFOSSIL CARBONFOSSIL FUELSFRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGEFRAUDFUEL CONSUMPTIONFUEL USEFUELSFUNCTIONALITYGASESGENERAL PUBLICGHGGHGSGREENHOUSEGREENHOUSE GASGREENHOUSE GAS DATAGREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONGREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONSGREENHOUSE GASESICTIMAGEIMPACT ASSESSMENTSINDUSTRIAL GASESINFORMATION SYSTEMINNOVATIONINSTALLATIONINSTALLATIONSINSTITUTIONAL CAPACITYINTERFACESINTERNATIONAL POLICIESINVENTORIESINVENTORYIPCCJAVALAND MANAGEMENTLAND USELAND USE CHANGELANDFILLLANDFILL METHANELICENSESMAINTENANCE COSTSMANAGEMENT SYSTEMMANAGEMENT SYSTEMSMARKUPMATERIALNATIONAL EMISSIONNATIONAL EMISSIONSNATIONAL GRIDNATURAL GASNATURAL RESOURCESNUMBER OF USERSONE-STOP SHOPONLINE DATABASEONLINE DATABASESONLINE SYSTEMSPOLICY MAKERSPOLICY SUPPORTPOWER GENERATIONPOWER PLANTSPROTOCOLREAL-TIME DATAREFERENCE SOURCEREGISTRIESREGISTRYREGULATORY REQUIREMENTSRELIABILITYRENEWABLE ENERGYREPOSITORYRESULTSATELLITESEARCHABLE DATABASESECURE DATASECURITY FEATURESSECURITY STANDARDSSENSITIVITY ANALYSISSITESSOIL CARBONSPREADSHEETSPREADSHEETSSYSTEM DEVELOPMENTSYSTEM REQUIREMENTSTAGGINGTARGETSTECHNICAL ASSISTANCETECHNICAL REQUIREMENTSTOTAL EMISSIONSTRACKING SYSTEMTRADABLE CARBONTRANSACTIONTRANSMISSIONUNCERTAINTY ANALYSISUSABILITYUSER INTERFACEUSER INTERFACESUSER TRAININGWEBSITEXMLPMRSupporting GHG Mitigation Actions with Effective Data Management SystemsWorking PaperWorld Bank10.1596/21828