Title: Salzburg Renewable Energy
1Clean and affordable energy for development
Salzburg Renewable Energy Summer
School Giulio Volpi, WWF International gvolpi_at_wwf
epo.org www.panda.org/climate
2Content
1. Provide energy to developing countries without
destroying the climate2. The role of
renewables3. Barriers to renewables4.
Emerging policies to support renewables5.
Conclusions what needs to be done
3WWFWorldwide Fund for Nature
- Scope
- Largest independent member-based conservation
organization in the world, 5 million supporters - Conservation of biological diversity worldwide
- Over 35 years old with 10 years of climate and
energy experience - Reach
- Presence in 100 countries
- Web site reaches 3 million people per month
- Worlds most recognized conservation logo - the
panda!
4WWFMission and Action
WWFs mission is to stop the degradation of the
planets natural environment and to build a
future in which humans can live in harmony with
nature, by - conserving the worlds biological
diversity - ensuring that the use of renewable
resources is sustainable - promoting the
reduction of pollution and wasteful consumption
- Historical nature conservation action
- wildlife species
- freshwaters
- forests
- seas and fisheries
- Consumption-based action on
- climate change
- toxic
- trade and investment
5WWFClimate Change Programme
- Climate change programme
- 40 staff in 4 continents working on climate
impacts, causes and solution (including private
sector initiatives) - Increase awareness of climate change and ways to
address it - Assess the environmental and economic impacts of
proposed climate mitigation measures - Propose and advocate energy efficient
technologies and policies - Encourage the supply of renewable forms of energy
- Propose policies and measures - national and
international levels - Develop innovative solutions with businesses
61. The challenge
Provide energy services without additional local
and global pollution
7Definitions
- Basic energy services access to power for
lighting, refrigeration, telephone, radio and TV - Renewable energies biomass, green hydropower,
wind, solar PV and thermal, geothermal, wave
power - Traditional biomass wood-fuel, agriculture
residues, animal waste, characol, etc. - Energy markets
- On grid (with access to the power grid - urban
areas) - Off-grid (without access to the power grid -
peri-urban and rural areas)
8Energy and Human Development
9Energy is priority for development, but...
UNDPs 1997 Poverty has received scant
attention from an energy perspective. This is
remarkable given that energy is central to the
satisfaction of basic nutrition and health needs,
and that energy services constitute a sizeable
share of total household expenditure in
developing countries. Commission on Sustainable
Development (CSD) 2001 To implement the goal
accepted by the international community to halve
the proportion of people living on less than US1
per day by 2015, access to affordable energy
services is a prerequisite.
1022 billion energy poors
- 2000 2 Billion energy poors, mostly in the
South, and in rural areas - Roughly the same as in the 70s, as population
growth in the last 30 years has offset energy
access for a billion people (mainly in China) - 2.4 billion people use biomass - largely
unsustainably, mainly for firewood for cooking - Largest rural challenge is household cooking and
electricity supply
1122 billion energy poors
- By 2020, 2 additional billion energy poors,
- mostly in the South, and in cities
- Developing countries will account for 75 of
energy growth (largely in Asia) - Biggest growth of energy demand in the South is
in industry/power sector - Energy inequalities per capita power consumption
varying within South, in Africa it will stagnate - Competion for energy between sectors industry in
Asia consumes almost 2/3 of energy with a growth
of 6 p.a.
12Current trends will increase global climate
pollution...
- ? Energy demand is going to double in the South
- According to IPCC, coal in the power sector is
expected to grow from 65 EJ now to 106 EJ by 2020
(CO2 from coal are half of current global
emissions) - Natural gas in power sector to grow from 30 to 60
EJ, adding another 1 billion tone CO2 - Continuing this trend will increase local and
global climate pollution, with disastrous effects
on developing countries
13and increase poverty!
? Corals, forests and islands in the developing
world face already today first impacts of climate
change ? Global harvests may increase, in the
developing world not ? Global water balances may
not change, in the developing world they do ?
Global GDP losses may be low - not the case for
Small Island States ? Atmospheric CO2
concentrations are the highest since 420,000
years ? In order to avoid dangerous climate
change, emissions must drop by 50 globally in
the next decades
142. The solution
Developing renewable energies and energy
efficiency technologies
15Renewable energy still small
16Renewable power even smaller
RES electricity capacity in developing countries
(MW, 2000)
17Benefits of renewables
Benefits of renewables
- Indigenous energy source reducing reliance on
imported energy, especially oil and gas. A 5
barell upward cost would increase energy bill by
90 billion/year, higher than present and future
ODA - Renewables often are the only cost-effective
option for off-grid applications - Decentralised supply possible- small scale and
lower operation and maintenance costs - No air pollution and greenhouse gases emissions
- But limitations regarding costs, base load,
storage, upfront costs
18Development basic needs and RES
- DEVELOPMENT NEEDS Wh/day
kWh/yr - WATER electric pump providing 5 liters
day/capita 5 2 - LIGHTING 5 hours _at_ 20W per day/household
20 7 - MUSIC 5 hours _at_ 5W per day/household
5 2 - HEALTH 2.5 kWh per day (lighting and
refrigeration X100) 5 2 - EDUCATION 2.5 kWh per day (lighting/heating/comp.
X100) 5 2 - PRODUCTION 5 kWh per day (equipment X 10)
100 36 - Total 140
- SOLAR PANEL 40-50 W
19Example PV solar for residential use
Battery
PV panel
Converter
Minigrid system
Solar home system
20Energy efficiency improvements
COOKING STOVES
- More than 2 billion people use biomass for
cooking, through a traditional three-stones stove - Severe health and productive impacts indoor
pollution (1 million death/year), women power
wasted (3 hours/day), deforestation (in some
areas) - 60 of population could switch to more efficient
cooking stoves (more than 1 billion) - Costs varies between 1 (Africa) and 10 (China)
- Improved biomass cook stoves for 200 million
people is feasible from a cultural, financial,
and logistical (G8 Renewable Energy Task Force)
21Renewables and productive uses
- General cathegories
- Agriculture water pumping, drip irrigation, crop
drying - Health drinking water, vaccine refrigeration,
health centres - Education distance education, school lighting,
computed training - Commercial services telephony, commercial
communication, fax - Small industry craft tools, retail lighting,
sewing, grinding, freezing
22PV solar for productive use
23Renewable energy installations (2000)
- Rural residential and community lighting, TV,
radio, and telephony - Over 50 million households served by small-hydro
village scale mini-grids, and 10 million lighting
from biogas - 1 million households have solar PV home systems
or solar lathers - 10,000 households served by solar/wind/diesel
hybrid mini-grids - Rural small industry, agriculture, and other
productive uses - Up to 1 million water pumps driven by wind
turbines and over 25,000 water pumps powered by
solar PV - Up to 60,000 small enterprises powered by
small-hydro village-scale mini grids - Thousands of communities receive drinking water
from solar PV-powered purifiers/pumps - Grid-based bulk power
- 48,000 MW installed capacity producing 130,000
GWh/year (mostly small hydro and biomass, with
some geothermal and wind) - Residential/commercial cooking and hot water
- 220 million more-efficient biomass stoves
- 10 million households with solar hot water
systems - 800,000 solar cookers
24What about the costs?
25Global costs setting
G8 Renewable Energy Task Force (2001) The
successful promotion of renewables over the next
30 years will prove less expensive than a
"business as usual approach" to the global energy
supply
263. Why is this not happening?
Barriers to renewables
27Barriers to renewable energy
- To secure greater market penetration, renewables
must overcome the following barriers - Costs not yet competitive with conventional
energies - Inconsistent energy liberalisation
- Wrong economic incentives for renewables
- Lack of international finance to address high up
front costs of renewables and difficulties in
capital mobilisation - Lack of technology transfer
28Costs learning curve
- Wind - 60 of worlds wind turbines are located
in G8 countries - Solar - US, Japan and Germany drive the demand
for solar panels
Need for action in G8/OECD countries
29Energy liberalisation risks and opportunities
1. Competitive supply markets positive
renewables appears only after IPP framework
exist negative lower prices and shorter-term
power contracts 2. Unbundling of generation,
transmission and distribution positive greater
consumers incentives to self generate negative
transmission pricing penalties for intermittent
RES 3. Privatisation and/commercialisation of
utilities positive more commercial financing
available for renewables negative private
utilities focus on cost, less on public benefits
(environmental and social services)
30CASE STUDY 1 WIND POWER IN INDIA
- Positive investment tax policy resulted in more
than 1000 MW of wind power installed - Dozen of domestic wind turbine manufactures
emerged, many joint ventures with foreign firms - Awareness raising activities among investors and
banks of viability of wind power technology
(financing is now offered) - Political priority national target of installing
10,000 MW by 2010 (10 of new power capacity) - However.
31CASE STUDY 2 SMALL HYDRO IN SRI LANKA
- Established a private independent power producers
and non-negotiable transparent power tariffs - Tariffs were set at 5 cents/kWh in 1997-98 and
industry flourished 25MW installed with
international financing - But tariffs were based on short-run avoided
costs, so with decline in oil prices in 1998-99,
tariffs went to 3.5 cents/kWh in 1999 and
installations stopped (and industry confidence
collapsed) - Power purchase tariffs lack capacity credits,
only provide for energy production, so small
hydro is unfairly penalised
32Wrong economic incentives
Subsidies range from "direct" subsidies, that is
government spending (eg tax reductions and
research and development funding) to "hidden"
subsidies (eg favourable tax rates for oil and
gas exploration). Hidden subsidies are
represented by pollution costs and historical
support. While some governments are starting to
reduce selected fossil fuel or nuclear subsidy
programmes, there is still a significant bias
against renewable and efficient energy
technologies.
33Massive subsidies to bad energy
Renewables
Fossil Fuels
G8 Subsidies
EU (year)
90 billion
4 billion
US (1948-1998)
125 billion
5 billion
World (year)
250 -300 Billions
Over 1996-2000, China reduced subsidies to its
coal industries, which resulted in carbon dioxide
emission cuts by 7.3, while its GPD increase by
39.
34Lack of international finance for RES
Global, total investment but power,
manufacturing industry and transport are major
recipients
35Export Credit Agencies (ECAs)
- Export credit agencies (ECAs) are official
government agencies that provide assistance in
supporting or facilitating domestic exports. - During the 1990s, ECAs provided an average of US
100 billion per annum in loans and guarantees.
That amount represents roughly twice the level of
official development assistance during the same
period (US 50 billion), and over 30 of all long
term finance received by developing countries. - Defaults on ECA-financed projects account for the
approximately half of all developing country
official debt.
36ECAs fuelling climate pollution
G8 country ECAs from 1994-1999 supported over
115 billion in fossil fuel intensive projects in
developing countries. The U.S. export credit
agencies for instance, underwrote 23.2 billion
in fossil fuels and these projects over their
lifetimes will release 29.3 billion tons of
carbon dioxide a figure greater than global
emissions for 1996. Japanese and German ECA's
surpass those figures in dollar amounts. There
are currently 25 nuclear reactors under
construction throughout the world. Of these, 14
are financially backed by an ECA from the G8.
Globally ECA support for renewable energy is
negligible comparing with perverse subsidies for
fossil fuels and nuclear projects.
37Official Development Assistance
- Energy has not played a large role in ODA since
1990, only 5 of total European Comm ODA went to
energy - The share of renewable ODA has been fluctuating
over the years and his still largely supporting
conventional fuels
38ODA UK example
- Despite positive statements on the export of
clean energy technologies, the UK Development
Assistances support of energy projects tells a
different story - Of the 119.75 Millions pounds that was approved
in bilateral commitments for energy, only 90,000
went to renewable energies - That means that only 0.07 of total UK ODA
financing for energy goes to renewable energies - This is much lower than the RES contribution to
world energy supply(2)
394. Drivers for renewables development
40The Kyoto Protocol
- The Kyoto Protocol has created the two
project-based flexible mechanisms - the Clean
Development Mechanism, and Joint Implementation
with the aim to - promote more clean investments in economies in
transition (JI) and developing countries (CDM) ,
and - allow industrialised country firms to take
advantage of low cost opportunities overseas
41CDM the Clean Development Mechanism
- The CDM allows industrialised countries (Annex 1
Parties) and their companies to use credits from
greenhouse gas emission reduction projects in
Developing Countries to meet their commitments
under the Protocol. - These projects must be
- additional to existing planned investments, and
- contribute to sustainable development in the host
country.
42The CDM Market
The market for carbon-reduction credits has
begun to take off over the last two years. In
2001, approximately 50-80 million tonnes of
carbon dioxide equivalent were traded, despite
their being no guarantee of the eligibility of
the allowances for Kyoto compliance. Prices
ranged from US3 to US10/tonne of
CO2. Projections of the eventual value of the
market vary widely and are subject to uncertainty
but reasonable estimates range from US500
million to US12 billion a year by 2012.
43Small projects rules
- The Marrakech accords include simplified rules
for small projects - Renewable energy projects up to 15 MW or
equivalent - Whats meant by equivalent
- What will the impact be?
- Energy efficiency up to 15 GWh/yr
- Reductions from sources that emit lt15Kt CO2/yr.
- Likely to promote gas generation volume depends
on baseline comparison
44Risks of CDM
- Given the little to guarantee environmental
effectiveness, there is a significant risk that
the offset projects will - Result in the market being swamped by
non-additional projects, generating little new
investment and low prices. - Cause environmental and social damages to host
country communities. - Promote the continued dependence on
unsustainable energy sources and technologies and
do little to enhance the market for renewables
and other long-term climate solutions.
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47The WWF carbon label
In spite of this uncertainty, the widespread
introduction of climate change policies and the
emergence of a positive price for carbon means
firms have to plan their emission reduction
investments now and face a growing need for risk
management alternatives. Quality assurance - of
the credibility of projects, their environmental
effectiveness and likely compliance with
regulations is thus becoming increasingly
important. This is the aim of the international
carbon label programme being developed by WWF.
48The G8 Renewables energy task force
- Established at the July 2000 G8 Summit in
Okinawa - Mission to identify actions that can be taken
to give a major boost to renewable energy in
developing countries - Composed of high level industry and governmental
manager (co-chairmen former Shell CEO Sir Mark
Moody Stuart, Mr Clini Director General of
Italian Env Ministry, and BP, France, UK,
Germany, WB etc.). - Good report sinked by US and Canada opposition
at Genova G8 Summit
49The G8 Renewables energy task force
- Good report sinked by US and Canada opposition
at Genova G8 Summit
50The G8 task force legacy
- Barriers to massive uptake of renewable are
only financial and political - not technological.
Costs will be cut by expanding markets. - RES projects should be developed "when they
achieve protection of local and/or global
environment at a reasonable cost. - Remove supports for environmentally harmful
energy technologies. - Implement common environmental guidelines among
the G8 Export Credit Agencies (ECAs) including
minimum standards of energy-efficiency or carbon
intensity for ECA-financed projects. - Global corporations, which are large consumers of
energy, should commit to procure and use
renewable energy.
51The World Summit on Sustainable Development
- Focus on Poverty Eradication, but energy is high
on the political agenda (together with water) and
was a blocking issue in preparatory meetings - US and allies oppose any action, EU rhetoric for
renewables not backed by leadership and vision,
G77 China hostage of OPEC countries interests. - NGOs are running a campaign for a global new
renewable energy target
52WWF vision for WSSD
- Initiate a 10 year action programme to provide
energy from clean and affordable sources to the 2
billion people without access to energy, and to
improve energy services through energy efficiency
and other measures to those with inadequate
energy services - Set a target to increase the share of new
renewables globally to 10 by 2010, and to
improve energy efficiency in OECD countries by at
least 2/yr..
53And Action Plan for Renewables
- Double government ODA-budgets for sustainable
energy services, including GEF replenishment by
2003. - Target 20 of OECD country energy sector lending
and export credit guarantees to renewable energy
development and energy efficiency programmes - Phase out of subsidies to conventional energy
sources by 2012 with reviews of progress in 2006
54Conclusions
- Energy is key for development goals
- Renewable energies can deliver energy needs where
conventional energy fails, at a global lower cost - The Kyoto Protocol and the G8 RES task force have
driven political momentum for renewables, but oil
and nuclear lobbies work against it - Will the World Summit on Sustainable Development
deliver a global action plan for renewable
energies ???