accelerating international action on energy efficiency · santiago de chile, chile, 9-11 september...
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Accelerating International Action on Energy Efficiency
Tim Farrell
Senior Advisor
Latin American and Caribbean Carbon Forum
Santiago de Chile, Chile, 9-11 September 2015
Outline
•Sustainable Energy for All (SE4ALL) - goal and tracking
•Copenhagen Centre on Energy Efficiency (C2E2) Regional Reports
•Global Energy Efficiency Accelerator Platform
•Readiness for Investment in Sustainable Energy (RISE) Initiative
•Climate Technology Centre and Network (CTCN)
One Goal:
Achieving Sustainable Energy for All by 2030 Three Objectives:
Sustainable Energy for All (SE4ALL)
Proxy indicator
Universal access to modern
energy services
Doubling global rate of improvement of energy efficiency
Doubling share of renewable energy in global
energy mix
Percentage of population with electricity access
Percentage of population with
primary reliance on non-solid fuels
Rate of improvement in energy intensity
Renewable energy share in TFEC
1990 76 47
–1.3
16.6
2010 83 59 18.0
2030 100 100 –2.6 36.0
Starting point for SE4ALL goals
How far is the rate of progress from that required to attain SE4ALL?
Source: Progress Toward Sustainable Energy - Global Tracking Framework 2015
Annual Global Investment - actual and required ($ billion)
Annual global investments of 1.0 -1.2 trillion are required to 2030 to meet the SE4ALL objectives.
Source: Progress Toward Sustainable Energy - Global Tracking Framework 2015
7
Copenhagen Centre on Energy Efficiency
C2E2
International Organisations e.g. UNEP, IEA,
IRENA
Development Banks e.g.
World Bank, ADB, IADB,
EBRD
Regional Partners e.g.
UN Reg Comm, Cenef, AIT
National Governments
Other Stakeholders e.g. Private
Sector, Universities,
IFIs
SE4ALL Global EE Accelerator
Platform
Capacity building in target countries
Private sector engagement
(including PPP)
Championing EE and SE4ALL objective
Key
Fo
cus
Are
as
4 Regional Reports on EE
•Barriers and opportunities to energy efficiency improvement
•Recommended future action in selected countries
www.energyefficiencycentre.org
Large energy efficiency potential in sectors
Two-thirds of energy efficiency potential will remain untapped by 2035 without the acceleration of energy efficiency actions.
Source: World Energy Outlook, IEA (2012)
What is the Global Energy Efficiency Accelerator Platform?
•Established to support specific sector-based energy efficiency accelerators.
•Targeting action at various levels - regions, countries, cities and companies.
•Developing Public-Private Partnerships including organisations, development banks, financial institutions etc.
•Platform was formally launched at UN SG CC Summit in September 2014 with an evolving group of Accelerators
Lighting Transport and Motor Fuel Efficiency
Appliances & Equipment Building Efficiency
District Energy
Global market transformation to efficient lighting
Improve the fuel economy capacity of the global car fleet
Promote sustainable building policies & practices worldwide
Support national & municipal governments to develop or
scale-up district energy systems
Industrial Energy Efficiency
Implementing Energy Management Systems,
technologies & practices
Global market transformation to efficient appliances & equipment
Power Sector Finance
Improving the efficiency of generation, transmission,
distribution & end-use
Accelerating investment in energy efficiency
The Accelerator Platform was established to support specific sector-based energy efficiency accelerators
Global Energy Efficiency Accelerator Platform
Transport and Motor Fuel Efficiency
Expected savings: 1 Gt CO2 by 2025 and 2 Gt CO2 - by 2050
The Global Fuel Economy Initiative (GFEI) was established in 2009 with the primary aim to:
• reduce emissions
• at least double the efficiency of the global vehicle fleet from an average of 8L/100 km in 2005 to 4L/100 km by 2050
• halve new light duty vehicle fuel economy (in l/100km or gCO2/km) by 2030
Governments joining the GFEI are committing to develop national fuel economy policies
more than 40 countries joined
Instruments Supported Regulatory policies: National Standards, Import Restrictions, Technology Mandates Economic instruments, Traffic control measures, Information Technology
en.lighten Global Partnership Programme Goal: To accelerate a global market transformation to environmentally sustainable, energy efficient lighting technologies, as well as to develop strategies to phase-out inefficient incandescent lamps.
67 partner countries worldwide
Appliances and Equipment - An integrated policy approach to transform markets
Appliances and Equipment Assessments
•33 Country Assessments have been completed in Latin America and Caribbean Region
•Transition to best available energy efficient refrigerators, air conditioners and electric fans in households in the LAC region could result in annual energy savings of 138 TWh - equivalent to USD 20 billion.
Building Partnership in Mexico City Commitment from city to:
– Implement a building energy code
– Retrofit public buildings
Launch event and workshop for common vision – 19 March 2015 – 100 Participants – including 25 city government, 5 federal
government, 20 businesses, 8 finance, 21 consultants
– 4 workgroups chaired by Mexico City staff and an SE4All partner, project managed by WRI/CTS EMBARQ
Action plan now underway:
District Energy
5 International Organizations 6 Industry Associations 8 Private Sector Companies 27 Local and National Governments
Technical Assistance • City twinning. • Pre feasibility and feasibility
studies. • International consultants. • Metering equipment.
Awareness raising • Study tours. • Assistance in negotiations.
at national level. • Public consultations.
Successful Market Transformation
Demonstrations activities • Local planning policies. • Local and national support
programmes. • Regulatory framework. • Tariff structures.
Capacity Building & Knowledge Transfer
• Best practice sharing. • Training workshops. • Heat planning. • Local coordination
development.
Leveraging the Partnership and Pool of Expertise to Provide
Readiness for Investment in Sustainable Energy (RISE)
• A suite of indicators that assesses the legal and regulatory environment for investment in sustainable energy.
• Provide a global reference point that will support decision-making and inform country-level interventions under the SE4ALL initiative
• Pilot phase of 17 countries completed in 2014 • RISE encompasses 28 indicators and 85 sub-indicators across four
categories.
http://rise.worldbank.org/
83
75
65
50
38 37
31 29
24 24 24 23 23 22 22
17 15
-
20
40
60
80
100 Pricing and Subsidies
Policies and Regulations
Planning
0% 50% 100%
Fossil Fuel Subsidy
Quality of Information Provided to Consumers
Incentives from Electricity Pricing
Entities for EE Policy, Regulation and Implementation
Energy Labeling Systems
National Plan for Increasing EE
Minimum Energy Efficiency Performance Standards
Incentives or Mandates for Large-scale Users to Invest in EE
Incentives or Mandates for Public Entities to Invest in EE
Incentives or Mandates for Energy Supply Utilities to Invest in EE
Carbon Pricing Mechanism
Building Energy Codes
RISE energy efficiency score Proportion of countries in traffic lights
Over time, progress in RISE scores ought to demonstrate relationships with flows of private investment as well as incremental achievements in SE4ALL goals.
Readiness for Investment in Sustainable Energy (RISE)
Global Rollout will cover 110 countries
Climate Technology Centre & Network (CTCN)
Stimulate technology cooperation and enhance the development and transfer of technologies to developing country Parties at their request.
Services:
1. Technical assistance
2. Capacity building
3. Networking – linking with finance opportunities
Mission:
Value proposition:
Unlocking barriers to investment climate smart technology solutions
Distribution of CTCN requests by region
CTCN Structure: National Designated Entities (NDEs)
132 nominated by UNFCCC National Focal Points as of 2 September 2015. National climate technology coordinators in context of UNFCCC.
Examples of CTCN Requests
LATIN AMERICA
• October 26-30, Costa Rica (with IADB, CATIE, Bariloche Foundation, Network
Members)
CARIBBEAN SIDS
• Oct.-Nov. 2015, Barbados
Country Request
Colombia Monitoring and evaluation of national promotion policies for energy efficiency (EE) and renewable energy (RE) against national targets
Dominican Republic
Efficient lighting (NAMA design)
Uruguay Replacement project of fluorinated refrigerants for end users of
refrigeration equipment in the dairy sector in Uruguay
Chile
Introducing refrigerants with low GWP in the food sector
Capacity Building: CTCN Regional Forums
www.ctc-n.org
Thank you
www.energyefficiencycentre.org
Tim Farrell
Copenhagen Centre on Energy Efficiency (C2E2)
UN City , Copenhagen, Denmark
Email: [email protected]
www.energyefficiencycentre.org