Overview
 
|  Kyrgyzstan
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  Geography and Climatic Conditions[1]   
 Kyrgyzstan is a landlocked country located in the heart of Central Asia. It is bordered by Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, and China. 
The Tien Shan mountain range cover roughly 95% of the country. It has a polar climate in the Tien Shan Mountains, a subtropical climate in the Southwest, and temperate climatic conditions in the Northern foothills. Shrub land, savannah, and grassland make up 56% of the land and cropland compromises 27%.
The average low  temperature is 4.8°C while the average high temperature is 17.0°C.[2]    
In contrast to neighboring countries, Kyrgyzstan has small amounts of fossil fuels, but enjoys large amounts of water resources with an abundant hydro power potential. 
The land area covered by forest is 4.5%but is decreasing.
  Socio-economic Development[3]  
Kyrgyzstan's population is 5.57 million. The population density is 27 people per square kilometer. Urban populationcompromises 35% while the rural population makes up 65%. The literacy rate (age 15+) is 98.7% 
The GDPis and GDP per capital is 
GDPgrew more than 6% in 2007-08, but declined after that. 
Income sources share consist of 48% agriculture, 12.5% industry, and 39.5% services. 
  
  National Energy Situation  
Kyrgyzstan has an abundant supply of hydro power. It also has locally exploitable coal, oil, and natural gas. 
It was the first country in the Commonwealth of Independent States(CIS) to develop an independent regulatory agency for economic regulation of the energy sector. 
Primary energy shares in 2008 comprised of the following : Hydro 31.8%, coal 18.5%, gas 21.5%, oil 28.1%, renewable and waste 0.1%. [4] 
Approximately 95% of the population is connected to the grid. Losses in the distribution system range from 40-50% and reliabality is poor. Electricity losses are greater in residential areas. About 30% of the distribution systems need to be replaced. 
The bulk (90%) of Kyrgyzstan's generating capacity is hydro power. The country has for some time now considered the development of hydro power resources as the central foundation of its overall economic development. 
Potential for Renewable Energies
Low tariffs and abundant hydroelectric power resources have limted the development of RE sources. Hydro-power is the only documented renewable energy source for electricity production on national level[4]
There are,however, some potentials for solar energy and large scale and micro-hydro power plants. There are about 2,600 hours of sunshine per year. A law on renewable energy was adopted in 2008. It includes biomass small scale projects, small hydropower programs, solar small scale projects and wind energy in the national program.As of now, biogas plants have only been established by private initiatives.
     
     
  Energy Supply  
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  Electricity  
  Sources  
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  Stability  
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  Energy Consumption  
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  National Level  
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  Potentials  
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  Biomass  
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  Biogas  
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  Hydro Power  
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  Other renewable Sources  
  
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  Key problems of the energy sector  
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  Policy framework, laws and regulations  
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  General Energy policy, Energy strategy  
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  Important Laws and regulations  
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  Specific strategies (Biomass, renewable energies, rural electrification, energy access strategy etc.)  
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  Institutional set up in the energy sector  
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  References  
  - ↑ GIZ (2009): Regional Reports on Renewable Energies Energies - 30 Country Analysis on Potentials and markets
 
- ↑ http://data.un.org/CountryProfile.aspx?crName=
 
- ↑ https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/kg.html
 
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 http://www.iea.org/stats