seoul | jun-15 | smart villages agenda & concept
TRANSCRIPT
e4sv.org
e4sv.org
DAY 1 – FRIDAY JUNE 12TH - CONCEPT AND OFF-GRID ENERGYFACILITATION/CHAIR: RICHARD HAYHURST
09.00 Welcome & introductions
09.30 Smart Village concept – Dr Terry van Gevelt, University of Cambridge
10.15 Video case study – Terrat Village, Tanzania
10.30 Break
11.00 Group discussion: taking energy for granted
What is it like having to live without (reliable) energy?
11.30 Presentation – Dr Alvin Yeo, UNIMAS (Universit Malaysia Sarawak
Employing ICT for Socio-Economic Development in Remote and Rural Communities in Malaysian Borneo: A Holistic, Interdisciplinary and Participatory Approach
12.15 Video case study – Cinta Mekar, Indonesia
12.30 Lunch
14.00 Group discussion: in-country examples
14.45 Insights in energy reporting, journalistic practice & challenges across different global regions – Sharon Schmickle, Julia Vitullo-Martin
15.30 Break
16.00 Video case study – Light Up Borneo, Sabah, Malaysia
16.15 Group discussion: technology options –Where is cutting-edge research taking us? Dr Claudia Canales
17.00 Video case study – SACASOL, Philippines
17.30 Close
e4sv.org
DAY 2 – SATURDAY JUNE 13TH - BENEFITS AND CHALLENGESFACILITATION/CHAIR: RICHARD HAYHURST
09.00 Recap of day 1; Technology leapfrogging benefits
09.15 Entrepreneurship case study - EKOCENTER
09.45 Presentation – Dr Chong Eng Tan, UNIMAS
Objective-Oriented Technology Innovation for ICT Adoption in the Remote and Rural Areas
10.30 Break
11.00 Health case study – QUANTUMDX
Video case study – Swasthya Slate, India
11.45 Journalism challenge - Smart City analogy - JVM/SS
13.00 Lunch•
14.00 Group exercise – imagining a smart village
15.00 Insights in energy reporting – Sharon Schmickle, Julia Vitullo-Martin
15.30 Break
16.00 E4SV Stories, Images and Blogs – Dr Claudia Canales-Holzeis, University of Oxford
16.30 E4SV Future activities, opportunities, conclusions and finish – Richard Hayhurst
17.00 Close
e4sv.org
CONCEPT AND OFF-GRID ENERGY
• 3 year project with related activities in 5 regions – W&E Africa, SE Asia, India, South America
• Off grid energy to rural communities and potential impact• Bottom up approach – listening to ambitions, mapping
on-ground initiatives,• Matching with general progress, leading to policy advice
at national and international level• Give you a background on off-grid renewable energy –
key issue in Paris
e4sv.org
e4sv.org
CONCEPT AND OFF-GRID ENERGY
• Energy provision roughly kept track with population growth
• Still an off-grid population + poor quality access • Pico/nano solutions – good penetration, no longer toys,
big guys moving in• Mini-grids – fallacy that private sector will provide• Hub and spoke approach• Metrics a developing field – Multi-tiered access key to
new Sustainability Goals of Energy Access for All
e4sv.org
CONCEPT AND OFF-GRID ENERGY
• Terrat – our first smart village – jatropha as biofuel, from darkness to light, stimulating entrepreneurship, health, community
• ICT as enabling technology via UNIMAS telecentres • Working with remote communities at their pace, on their
terms• Forest signs saving knowledge and passing on to young
generation• Handicrafts – installing ambition, go for high end
products• Deconstruction stories from Myanmar, Vietnam
e4sv.org
CONCEPT AND OFF-GRID ENERGY
• Local examples – Abdallah on Nigerian SERC’s 3 offgrid villages, Lominda on Biogas from cowdung for school cooking, solar for vegetable drying, Yao on Philippines and bicycle power, Anna on island using solar for battery charging
• State of technology – solar forges ahead, storage investment, biofuel energy/cost ratios, floating hydro, geothermal, new appliances (DC), powerful enough for pumps, mobile coverage (google) – watch out for Otech.
• Need for researchers to take into account developing world applications right from the beginning
e4sv.org
WHY ARE WE HERE, WHAT ARE WE DOING?
• WE HAVE SOME NEW THINKINGWE BELIEVE JOURNALISTS ARE BEST WAY TO SPREAD THISVALUE YOUR INSIGHTS, INDEPENDENCE AND INDIVIDUALITY
• WE WANT TO PROVIDE INSPIRATION, CONTEXT, CASE STUDIES, DATA AND CONTACTS TO FOLLOW SMART VILLAGES OVER NEXT 2.5 YEARS
• 2ND WORKSHOP – FIRST IN KIGALI, OTHERS TO FOLLOW IN INDIA, BOLIVIA AND WEST AFRICA
MIX OF PRESENTATIONS, CASE STUIDES, EXERCISES AND DISCUSSION
INTERACTIVE
REPORT AND NETWORK
e4sv.org
WHY NOW?
• PARIS CLIMATE CHANGE TALKS• SUSTAINABILITY GOALS – ENERGY ACCESS
FOR ALL• LOCAL SITUATION• TECHNOLOGY TIPPING POINT• PROTO SMART VILLAGES
e4sv.org
THE SMART VILLAGES CONCEPT
Dr Terry van Gevelt
Project Manager, Smart Villages InitiativeResearch Associate, University of Cambridge
e4sv.org
A RURAL ANALOGUE TO SMART CITIES
• 47% of world’s population• 70% of world’s poor
e4sv.org
ENERGY AND RURAL DEVELOPMENT
• 1.3 billion individuals without electricity
• 3 billion suffer from energy poverty
• Overwhelming majority in rural areas (85%)
e4sv.org
ENERGY AND DEVELOPMENT
e4sv.org
ENERGY AND DEVELOPMENT
e4sv.org
ENERGY AND DEVELOPMENT: SOUTH KOREA
• Saemaul Undong (New Village movement)• Arguably the most successful modern
integrated rural development strategy• Top-down and bottom-up approach that
balanced local control and participation with central government control
e4sv.org
ENERGY AND DEVELOPMENT: SOUTH KOREA
e4sv.org
ENERGY AND DEVELOPMENT: SOUTH KOREA
e4sv.org
ENERGY AND DEVELOPMENT: SOUTH KOREA
Today he has electricity and television, access to motortillers and mechanical transport, and his life is comfortable, but, like most Koreans his age, he remembers when things were different. In his youth most farming was done by hard stoop labour, and one family could manage only a small farm. Fields were reaped with a sickle, and every day for weeks afterwards farmers like Chang had to spread dried sheaves in the courtyards and thresh them with a flail. Wives had to separate the grain from the chaff with winnowing baskets, and husk each day’s grain laboriously with a mortar and pestle.
Sorensen (1988:3)
e4sv.org
ENERGY AND DEVELOPMENT: SOUTH KOREA
e4sv.org
e4sv.org
RURAL ELECTRIFICATION
e4sv.org
INCUMBENT TECHNOLOGY BUNDLE
Technology Generation capacity (W) Services available Estimated economic cost
Fuel-based lighting, dry cell batteries, fee-based mobile phone charging
N/A Lighting, radio communication reception, two-way mobile communication
Day-to-day payments for increments of energy
e4sv.org
HOME SOLUTIONSTechnology Generation capacity
(W)Energy sources Services available Estimated economic
cost Pico-lighting solution 0.1 - 10 Hydro, wind, solar Lighting, radio
communication reception, two-way mobile communication
US$ 10-100
e4sv.org
HOME SOLUTIONSTechnology Generation capacity
(kW)Energy sources Services available Estimated economic
cost Stand-alone home systems
10 – 1,000 Hydro, wind, solar Same as PLS plus additional lighting and communication, television, fans, limited motive and heat power
US$ 75 – 1,000
e4sv.org
MINIGRIDS
Technology Generation capacity (kW)
Energy sources Services available Estimated economic cost
Mini-grids 1 - 1000 Hydro, wind, solar, biomass; diesel; hybrid combinations
Same as SHS plus enhanced motive and heat power, and ability to power community-based services
Medium-large capital cost, low marginal cost to end-user
e4sv.org
ENERGY SYSTEMS
Cost to consumer
Population Density
Home systems Minigrids
e4sv.org
HUB-AND-SPOKE MODEL
e4sv.org
INTEGRATED RURAL DEVELOPMENT
e4sv.org
LINKING ENERGY AND DEVELOPMENT
• Electricity development?• Lighting, Television vs. Income generation• Energy requirements
…a society’s ability to harness energy [is] the basis of development - Spencer (1897)
…the energy available to man limits what he can do and influences what he will do.
- Cottrell (1955)
e4sv.org
LINKING ENERGY AND DEVELOPMENT: S. KOREA
• Agriculture– Electricity-powered processing– Seedlings nurtured in greenhouses – Television programs for farmers (85%)– Diversified crop portfolios– High value cash crops– Larger-scale ranch management for livestock
e4sv.org
LINKING ENERGY AND DEVELOPMENT: S. KOREA
• Agriculture– Urban demand– Market structured by cooperatives– Processing and storage infrastructure– Increased information improved rural
household bargaining power
e4sv.org
LINKING ENERGY AND DEVELOPMENT: S. KOREA
• Rural industry– Companies manufacturing light industrial
goods for export and domestic markets• Food processing, textiles, leather products, wigs,
furniture, paper products, chemicals, ceramics, electronics and machine parts
e4sv.org
LINKING ENERGY AND DEVELOPMENT: S. KOREA
e4sv.org
PILLARS OF RURAL DEVELOPMENT
EnergyInfrastructure(physical/ICT)
Market structuring
Education
Champions
Entrepreneurs
Health
e4sv.org
THE SMART VILLAGES INITIATIVE
Project team: Universities of Cambridge and
Oxford
Key partners: - National Science
Academies - Practical Action / TERI
Funding: charitable foundations:
CMEDT & TWCF
e4sv.org
REGIONAL ENGAGEMENT
East Africa – June 2014
SE Asia – January 2015
South Asia – October 2015
South America – January 2016
West Africa – April 2016
Central America – November 2016
e4sv.org
THE SMART VILLAGES INITIATIVE
Focus: pico -systems, stand-alone home systems,
micro-/mini-grids
Policy advice: an insightful, ‘view from the frontline’
of the challenges of village energy provision for
development, and how they can be overcome
Approach: bring together the key players: villagers,
entrepreneurs, academics, NGO’s, financers, regulators
and policy makers etc:
What are the barriers?
How can they be overcome?
What messages to funders and policy makers?
e4sv.org
OUR ACTIVITIES
Regional engagement activities
Forward-look workshops
Entrepreneurial competitions
Case study documentation
Impact evaluations
Technical reports
Policy briefs
Edited books
Final workshops
Six international workshops
e4sv.org
Thank you for your attentionwww.e4sv.org | [email protected] | @e4SmartVillages