Title: Good Practice Guidance on TNA a background paper
1Good Practice Guidance on TNA a background
paper
- Prepared by E.Fida R. Nayamuth
- UNFCCC workshop
- Sharing Good Practice in Conducting TNAs
- Bangkok, 27-29 June, 2007
2Content
- Background
- Why this background paper on GPG on TNA?
- Objectives
- Scope
- TNA under the UNFCCC
- Targeted audience
- Approach.
- Status of the TNA
- Synthesis of GPG of TNA by steps
- Conducting TNAs
- Reporting TNAs
- Implementing
- Cross-cutting issues
- Next steps
3Why the background paper?
- Mandated by
- SBSTA 25 UNFCCC sec in collaboration with EGTT
to prepare a background paper on GP on TNAs - SBSTA 25 UNFCCC to organize a workshop on
sharing GPs of NA1 in conducting TNAs in Bangkok,
27-29 June, 2007 - SBSTA 26 UNFCCC to organize a workshop on GP
and experiences in conducting NCs in Cairo, 20-22
September, 2007 - SBSTA 26 UNFCCC make the paper available to
SBSTA 27 for its consideration and to Parties
along with synthesis report, newly completed TNAs
and other relevant info.
4Objectives of the paper
- The overall objective of the paper is to
- Compile and synthesize good practices from the
TNAs completed so far - Inspire the discussions and serve as source of
information for the participants of the workshop. - Help countries find ways of encouraging
technology transfer through GP and lessons
learned from those that are more advanced with
this process. - The paper could be used to form the basis for
preparing a technical paper on this matter at a
latter stage.
5Scope of the paper
- Covers 34 TNA reports completed,
- funded mainly by GEF Additional Financing for
phase II/top-ups - Overview of How? did countries carry out the
TNA process - overview of guidance on conducting, reporting and
implementing - experiences, lessons learned and challenges that
have emerged from the TNA process - Build upon the existing work
- UNFCCC, EGTT, UNDP, UNEP, CTI, etc
- Provides a How to guidance for improving TNA
process. - One size does not fit all but generic issues are
addressed - Case studies provided.
6TNA reports covered
7Targeted audience
- Participants of Bangkok workshop on sharing GP in
TNAs - Climate change teams of NA1 that are/will be
conducting the TNA process - Stakeholders involved in the TNA process
- International organization and/or donor countries
that are interested in the process of the
technology transfer to NA1 countries. - Participants of the Cairo workshop on sharing GP
in conducting NCs
8Approach
- Build upon a synthesis of the information
through - In-desk review of the 34 TNA reports,
- Workshop presentations on country experiences and
lessons learnt and breakout sessions discussions - Questionnaire survey on best/good practices in
TNAs during the Bangkok workshop. - The questionnaire includes a set of 48 questions
aiming to further clarify issues that could not
be clarified by the in-desk review of the TNA - Interviews with coordinators of the TNA
- In the course of workshop, and follow ups have
been made by e-mails. - Inputs from stakeholders are key Comments and
feedback on the draft paper from the participants
of both workshops - Build upon a working definition on Good
Practice - Paper is structured under an activity/step-wise
approach - Conducting, reporting and implementing.
- Each step current guidance generic issues in
country performances, GP, case study. - Consider both similarities and differences
between mitigation and adaptation
9TNA process main activities
10Good Practice (GP) a definition
- Good Practice has been previously used but no
definition as part of KM system of UNFCCC - Workshop report on GP in PM in A1P held in
Copenhagen, April 2000 - Countries may approach GP in international and
national context - Countries agreed that
- Good Practice more appropriate in international
setting - Best Practice is at a large extend country
specific - Good Practice Wikipedia
- as a management idea which asserts that there is
a technique, method, process, activity, incentive
or reward that is more effective at delivering a
particular outcome than any other technique,
method, process, etc - Good practice in the TNA process
- the most efficient (least amount of effort) and
effective (best results) way of conducting a TNA,
reporting and implementing its results, based on
repeatable procedures that have proven themselves
over time for large numbers of users. - Good Practice involve a set of evaluation
criteria - Methodology, priority area/sector covered, links
to dev goals, stakeholder involvement, barriers
addressed, potential for follow-up, reporting,
resorce utilization, replicability etc.
11CONDUCTING Managing the TNA process
- Findings from TNAs
- Management process not properly described
- Countries did not report on institutional
arrangements for conducting TNAs - A few countries indicate scoping workshops, ToRs.
- Lack of a proper focus (mitigation vs adaptation
key sectors, key technologies) of some TNAs leads
to the conclusion that they lacked a proper
strategic management of the process.
12 CONDUCTING Managing the TNA process
- Good Practice
- Nominate the right person as coordinator of the
TNA - Set up a national team of experts with people
previously involved in the national communication
process. - Set up a stakeholders group with the involvement
of high-level representatives from key relevant
institutions. - Develop a detailed work-plan with clear
objectives, outputs and activities and
deliverables and validate it with stakeholders an
the team. - Develop rules and procedures for write-ups and
final deliverables. - Hold an inception workshop to present the
objectives and expected deliverables and refine
any arrangements, if needed.
13CONDUCTING Managing the TNA process
14CONDUCTING Methodological aspects
- Findings from TNAs
- Most of the TNAs were conducted before the
completion and publication of the UNDP Handbook - All countries followed a process similar to that
of UNDP handbook because - Used other available guidance (CTI, UNEP, IPCC)
- UNDP Handbook preparation draw upon existing
resources - Methods used by countries served as reference
point for the UNDP handbook (workshops, feedback,
inputs) - In most of the cases stakeholders were involved
either through an inception/scoping workshop or
questionnaire survey. - Majority of TNAs do not quote the methodology
used. -
15CONDUCTING Methodological aspects
- Good practice
- Use the most current updated guidance as a
methodological approach for conducting the TNA
study - Draw upon disseminated good practices and lessons
learnt by other countries who conduced the TNA
studies - Adopt/accommodate the selected methodological
guidance in accordance to the national
circumstances. There is no one size- fits-
all type of guidance.
16CONDUCTING Areas and sectors covered
- Findings from the TNAs
- All countries have passed through a preliminary
assessment - All focused their TNAs on sectors already
identified under their FNCs - for their potential for GHG reduction and/or
addressing vulnerability to climate change. - All countries (except of one) covered mitigation
with focus on energy sector - Adaptation not covered at the same range as
mitigation - Most of them lack the explanations on why do they
focus on a certain area. - When providing explanations on highlight
national circumstances, reference to the INC and
availability of resources
17CONDUCTING Areas and sectors covered
- Good practice
- Conduct a preliminary assessment and prioritize
sectors. - Conduct an overview of data sources, information
sources and data gaps - Conduct a scoping exercise (it might be a
workshop) to define the scope of work and design
TORs for each sector in the light of available
resources - Involve stakeholders from the inception phase of
the TNA (scoping phase) - Consider national circumstances and development
needs in the prioritization of sectors.
18CONDUCTING Areas and sectors covered
- Case Study (ALBANIA)
- Mitigation
- Overview of the sector
- Sector profile,
- Legal framework
- Policy framework.
- Overview of the work done under the Albanias
FNC - GHG inventory
- GHG mitigation.
- Take the stock of the technologies currently in
use - Overview of technology options
- Adaptation
- Profile of the targeted area (Coastal area)
- Overview of the vulnerability studies in the
targeted area - Overview of national plans/programs in the
targeted area - Overview of the work done under the Albanias FNC
with a focus on coastal area - Vulnerability and adaptation section.
- Take the stock of the technologies currently in
use
19CONDUCTING Methodologies for selection /
prioritization
- Findings from the TNAs
- In most of TNAs technologies were identified on
basis of three factors (Development goals,
contribution to CC, market potential) - A preliminary list of technologies has been
identified through expert judgement and
stakeholder consultation. - In some cases, priority technologies were simply
listed by sector and sub-sector without any
explanation. - Some countries provided detailed information on
the selection process, criteria and methods. - Tools used by countries involve
- Multi criteria analysis CB RB Analytical
hierarchy, survey questionnaire etc - Weight and scoring
- Those countries that did both mitigation and
adaptation used the same selection /
prioritization method - Explanations on the how stakeholders are involved
under this step are missing in most of the cases.
20CONDUCTING Methodologies for selection /
prioritization
- Good practice
- Set clear criteria for selection which must be at
least compatible with development objectives,
contribute to climate change mitigation and have
market potential. - Apply an inclusive process for criteria setting
by involving expert judgment, policy makers
judgment, and stakeholder consultation. - Decide on the tool of prioritization in
accordance to the national circumstances. - Use a wide range of criteria, identify a small
number of key sectors. - Build up a ranking matrix to evaluate
technologies. - Conduct a barrier analysis for the
selected/prioritized technologies. - Make plans to revisit the selected technologies
in the light of future development and change.
21CONDUCTING Methodologies for selection /
prioritization
- Case Study (CHINA)
- Environmental concern global and local
- GHGs mitigation
- Improvement of local environmental quality
- Technological concern
- Mature degree of technologies
- Advancement degree of technologies
- Reliability of technologies
- Penetration of technology application and
- Easiness of wider use of technology.
- Economic concern
- Internal Return Rate (IRR) and the effect of
pricing and fiscal policies on the IRR - Payback period
- Mitigation and adaptation costs
- Social concern
- Social efficiency necessity of TT
- Broader links with other sectors and groups
- Employment and poverty alleviation
22CONDUCTING Methodologies for selection /
prioritization
- Case Study (CHINA)
- High efficiency boilers
- Large thermal power generation (300-600 MW)
- Cogeneration
- High efficiency electric motors
- Green lighting
- Energy saving buildings
- Coal-bed methane recovery and utilization
- Biomass gasification
- Wind energy
- Solar thermal heat
- Biogas
- Waste heat and energy recovery
- Village hybrid renewable energy (wind PV)
- High efficiency cook stoves
- Alternative fuel transportation for urban regions
- Small-scale hydropower
- Combined cycle natural gas power generation
- Key technology needs
- Thermal power generation,
- High efficiency motors,
- High efficiency boilers,
- Wind energy and
- Coal bed methane recovery.
23CONDUCTING Methodologies for selection /
prioritization
- Case Study (CROATIA)
- Development benefits
- Job creation
- Capacity building (production, know-how)
- Economic structure change according to croatia
export orientation - Agriculture security
- Implementation potential
- Marginal cost
- Commercial readiness
- Technology availability
- Measure applicability
- Contribution to climate change response goals
- GHG emission reduction potential / enhancement of
CO2 sinks - Indirect effect on the other air pollutants
emission reduction - Conservation of energy
-
24- Key technology needs
- Wind power plants
- Biomass in heating plants
- Energy efficiency in buildings
- Biomass in cogeneration plants
- Increase in bio-diesel use
25CONDUCTING Next steps
- Findings from the TNAs
- Next steps, as from the identification of
technologies, were not always covered by
Countries . - Next steps reported varied among Countries.
- Those who reported presented general actions such
as - improving access to information on these
technologies, - awareness raising
- improving human capacity.
- Other Parties still proposed next steps for the
respective technologies in the form of - implementation plans,
- recommendations,
- project proposals.
- In some reports, it was difficult to distinguish
between barrier removal and next steps.
26CONDUCTING Next steps
- Good practice
- Next steps could aim at analyzing successful
implementation of the TNA results. - Draw implementation plans to address the barriers
identified. - This could be done by formulating complete
detailed project proposals for the transfer of
the selected technologies.
27CONDUCTING Develop project proposals
- Findings from TNAs
- Only a restricted number of Parties developed and
included project proposals in their TNAs. - The proposals differed mainly in quality
- did not include the same information
- The remaining Parties presented project concepts
or ideas ONLY
28CONDUCTING Develop project proposals
- Good practice
- Set-up a multidisciplinary team to write up a
detailed project proposal. - Adopt the UNFCCC practitioners guidebook
- A good project proposal must reply to the
questions - What is being proposed?
- Where will be implemented?
- Who will champion the proposal who else get
involved? - How will be implemented?
- Why is it important (financial, social,
environmental return)? - What if things do not go as planned?
- To Whom is he proposal addressed?
29REPORTING
- Findings from TNAs
- All countries produced TNA reports although they
either completely lacked or had partial guidance
on it - GEF Operational Procedures for top-ups do
consider TNA as follow-up of the NC but do not
ask for an official submission of the reports to
the UNFCCC - TNA reports have been collected and analysed
through the GEF Implementing Agencies - Available in their web pages and TT CLEAR
- Most of the reports consist on a step-by-step
description involving national circumstances and
cross-cutting issues but the level of detail is
different. - Countries used charts, tables, matrixes as part
of reporting the TNA findings - Majority of countries do not explain the
institutional arrangements and methodological
approach.
30REPORTING
- What a TNA report MUST contain
- Objective of the TNA
- Methodological approach
- A description of the institutional arrangements
- An overview of sectors, including GHG emissions
and the potential for their reduction and/or
adaptation to climate change - A preliminary summary of climate change
technologies - A statement on data gaps and constraints, and
measures adopted to correct them - Description of criteria and process for
technology evaluation - An overview of the assessment of technologies
according to the agreed priorities - List of priority sectors and key technologies for
preliminary action - A review of key barriers and steps to overcome
them, - A description of follow-up arrangements (in the
form of a implementation plan if appropriate or
project ideas/ notes/concepts/proposals) - A list of stakeholders and programme for
continued stakeholder engagement. Matrices of
evaluation.
31Next steps
- Strategies for improvement of the TNA process
- Integrating feedback from this workshop
- Integrating feedback from the UNFCCC sec and
EGTT - Draft final in mid-August, 2007
32