Comisión federal de electricidad distribución golfo norte sucursal centro

Distribucion energia mexico
Estado en Tuxtla Gutiérrez, MéxicoChiapasEstado Libre y Soberano de ChiapasEstado Libre y Soberano de Chiapas (Español)Barrio Sk'inal Chyapas (Tzeltal)Skotol Yosilal Chyapas (Tzotzil)Ijojyib laklumal Chyapas (Ch'ol)
Chiapas (pronunciación en español: [ˈtʃjapas] (escuchar); tzotzil y tzeltal: Chyapas [ˈtʃʰjapʰas]), oficialmente Estado Libre y Soberano de Chiapas, es uno de los estados que conforman las 32 entidades federativas de México. Comprende 124 municipios a septiembre de 2017[actualización][9][10] y su capital y ciudad más grande es Tuxtla Gutiérrez. Otros centros de población importantes en Chiapas son Ocosingo, Tapachula, San Cristóbal de las Casas, Comitán y Arriaga. Chiapas es el estado más meridional de México y limita al oeste con los estados de Oaxaca, al noroeste con Veracruz y al norte con Tabasco,[11] y al este y sureste con los departamentos de Petén, Quiché, Huehuetenango y San Marcos de Guatemala. Chiapas tiene una importante costa en el Océano Pacífico al suroeste.
Cenace
The final tariff charges of the basic supply described in this section correspond to the integration of the charges for Transmission, Distribution, Operation of CENACE, Operation of the Basic Supplier, Non-MEM Ancillary Services, Energy and Capacity.
The maximum demands measured in the different periods will be determined monthly by means of measuring instruments, which indicate the average demand in kilowatts, during any 15-minute interval of the period in which the consumption of electric energy is greater than in any other 15-minute interval in the corresponding period, any fraction of kilowatt of measured demand will be taken as a full kilowatt.
Sener mexico
La Transversalidad en el ordenamiento ecológico territorial:experiencias de Campeche y YucatánJorge I Euán Avila, Evelia Rivera Arriaga, Ma. de los A. LiceagaCorrea, Ana García de Fuentes, Gerardo Palacio Aponteand Guillermo J. Villalobos
Decentralization, regionalization and atomization in Rio Lagartos, Las Coloradas and El Cuyo: practices and politics of communities in eastern YucatanSabrina Doyon, Andréanne Guindon and Catherine Leblanc
In fact, without denying the specificity of the Yucatan case, the decentralization process that is taking shape in its environmental management has great illustrative value from both an analytical and practical point of view. The first point to highlight is that with a population of over 100 million inhabitants, distributed in sub-regions characterized by strong inequalities, Mexico has been a strongly centralized country for many decades. The relatively recent advent of political pluralism and new alliances with civil society has generated within the administrative apparatus several decentralization initiatives, whose studies and analyses, already numerous by national authors, efficiently underline the need to take into account regional and local particularities. Many lessons can be found at this general level that could be applied in other economic and political contexts, where decentralization is still an experimental process.