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1 J Asian Clean Energy Forum, 13 – 19 June 2015, Manila Asian Development Bank, Pre- Consultations
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Page 1: Sustainable Energy for All Overview

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Asian Clean Energy Forum, 13 – 19 June 2015, Manila Asian Development Bank, Pre- Consultations

Page 2: Sustainable Energy for All Overview

Presentation Sustainable Energy for All

• SE4All goal, team, targets and network

• SE4All highlights – last year

• Country Action in the Asia-Pacific region

• Energy Efficiency in the Asia-Pacific region

– Global Accelerator Platform

– Phased engagements/roadmaps

• Next steps2

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Sustainable Energy for All Goal

One Goal:

Achieving Sustainable Energy for All by 2030

Three Objectives:

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The SE4All Global Facilitation Team in Vienna

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Sustainable Energy for All Targets

Achieving Sustainable Energy for All by 2030

Finances needed per year:•access 50 billion USD•renewables 250 billion USD•energy efficiency 300 billion USD

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SE4All network

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2 Global Facilitation Offices10 SE4All Regional and Thematic Hubs2000 practitioners on the ground

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SE4All Highlights (I) of the past year

• Energy is centrally placed amongst the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) for the post-2015 development agenda.

• 106 countries have so far joined SE4All as partners (23 in Asia-Pacific)• Already commitments towards SE4All can halve energy poverty. • SE4All has launched a Global Energy Efficiency Accelerator Platform.• SE4All has identified opportunities to mobilize an additional $120 billion a

year in sustainable energy investments. (BoA, WB, BZL National Bank)• SE4All has built a strong network of regional and thematic hubs to

support implementation. There are now ten thematic and regional hubs established within existing institutions around the world, including for Asia-Pacific in the Asian Development Bank with Economic and Social Commission for Asia Pacific (ESCAP) and UNDP.  (SE4All status report)

• SE4All is coordinating a group of international organizations in drafting an Energy Access Action Plan for the G20.

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SE4All Highlights (II) over the past year

• 50 High-Impact Opportunities (HIOs) – areas with significant potential to advance SE4All’s objectives.

• Civil society is stepping up to the challenge. With more than 2000 practitioners.

• The WB has developed a Global Tracking Framework to monitor progress against the SE4All targets.  

• SE4All’s Advisory Board, co-chaired by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim, provides strategic advice to SE4All and the SE4All Executive Committee provides guidance, operational advice, direction and advice to the Chief Executive of the Sustainable Energy for All initiative.

• The Second Annual United Nations Sustainable Energy for All Forum featured the first ever Global Energy Ministerial Dialogue at the United Nations, in order to reaffirm the determination of Rio+20, reiterate commitment to the energy-children- health-nexus campaign.

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Country Action in the Asia-Pacific region

The SE4All Action Agendas and Investment Prospectuses will be an important tool for the implementation of the suggested SDG7. Some countries in Asia-Pacific are already working on these tools that aim to improve coordination and to stimulate investments. 13 Asia-Pacific countries have taken the first step of completing and Rapid Assessment/Gap Analysis as baseline for action. Some have already taken the next steps. Examples are: •Nepal: Energy+ is funding the development of an Action Agenda and the WB is funding an Investment Prospectus•Bangladesh: US State Department funded the development of an Investment Prospectus•Myanmar: World Bank funded the development of an Investment Prospectus

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Why is energy efficiency important in Asia and globally ?

• Greater energy efficiency provides a triple rationale for action through advancement towards achieving global climate goals in the form of emissions reductions, economic benefits (increased productivity, lower costs, net job creation) and improvement of people’s well-being.

• Targeted energy efficiency measures such as those under the Global Energy Efficiency Accelerator Platform, can deliver 50 per cent of the emissions reductions required to put the world on a 2°C pathway by 2020. (as laid out in the International Energy Agency’s 4-for-2°C Scenario)

 • Targeted energy efficiency measures can reduce emissions by 1.5 Gt

while generating $250-325 billion in savings for consumers each year (UNEP).

 

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Energy Efficiency brings enormous benefits in Asia

11Source: IEA

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The Global Energy Efficiency Accelerator Platform

• Leaders from more than 40 countries, 30 cities and dozens of corporations launched large-scale commitments on energy efficiency to cut emissions of greenhouse gases and reduce energy costs.

 • The Platform includes six energy efficiency sector initiatives: vehicles, lighting,

appliances, buildings, industry and district energy systems. Additional initiatives are under development to promote energy efficiency in the power sector and finance.

 • Over the past couple of months a vast number of national and city governments

were pledging to tackle energy efficiency at a broader level by participating in the Global Energy Efficiency Accelerator Platform. These include Chile and Nicaragua, Almaty and Astana (Kazakhstan), Cetinje (Montenegro), Jinan City (China), Leon (Mexico), Lima (Peru), Manila (Philippines), Science City of Muñoz (Philippines), Rio de Janeiro (Brazil), Thimphu City (Bhutan), Ulan Bator (Mongolia), Warsaw (Poland), and the Iskandar Region of Malaysia, with ten municipalities.

 • These governments are being joined by international organizations and financial

institutions that will help them prepare road maps and investment and action plans. They include: the World Bank (ESMAP), IDB, UNDP, EBRD, ADB and Energy+ of Norway.

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Energy Efficiency Accelerator Platform

The Global Energy Efficiency Accelerator Platform was established by SE4ALL to promote the objective of doubling the rate of energy efficiency improvement by 2030.

The Accelerator Platform drives and supports action and commitments by national and sub-national leaders at the country, city, state, regional, or business and sector level as well as by donors, funders and supporters of this initiative.

A key deliverable of the Accelerator Platform in each jurisdiction where it engages will be a Roadmap that describes the policies and projects that will be taken in order to achieve the energy efficiency improvements.

The Roadmap will also be used by SE4ALL to mobilize support from a global network of experts, institutions and businesses participating in this major global initiative.

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Energy Efficiency Network

Partners of the Global Energy Efficiency Accelerator Platform

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Energy Efficiency Accelerator Sectors

Power Sector Accelerator is under development

Lighting Vehicle Fuel EfficiencyAppliances & Equipment

Buildings 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

Industry

ImplementingEnergy Management

Systems, technologies & practices

Global market transformation to efficient appliances & equipment

The Accelerator Platform was established to support specific sector-based energy efficiency accelerators

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Transportation Accelerator

• Goal is to double the EE of all new vehicles by 2030 and of all vehicles by 2050This would save more than 1 gigaton of CO2/year by 2025 and more than 2 gigatons by 2050

• 40 Countries are participating.16

• The Vehicle Fuel Efficiency Accelerator is Implemented by the Global Fuel Economy Initiative (GFEI)

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Lighting Efficiency Accelerator

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• The Lighting Accelerator is implemented by the UNEP/GEF en.lighten partnership • Goal is to phase-out incandescent lamps by 2016

This will save more than 2 terawatt hours in electricity-use, 440 ktonnes emissions of CO2 and more than USD 270 million of electricity bill each year

• 65 countries are participating.

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• Implemented by the Global Partnership on Appliances and Equipment

• Goal is to reduce electricity consumption in air conditioners, refrigerators and fansThis will save165 TWh & 54 million tonnes of GHG emission/year, saving more than USD 22 billion each year

• 28 countries have expressed their willingness to join the Partnership.

Efficient Appliances Accelerator

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Building Efficiency Accelerator

• Facilitates collaborative, multi-stakeholder workshop to convene partners in each city.

• Provides governments with technical support leveraging best-in-class tools, databases and subject matter experts.

• Helps governments communicate and promote their commitments, calculate their baseline, report progress, and provide a platform for sharing experiences, challenges & best practices.

• International financial partners will provide funding to support policy development and demonstration project implementation.

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District Energy Systems Accelerator

• Private sector partners include Danfoss, Grundfoss, Siemens, Vattenfall, Veolia, Climespace and Empower

• 19 cities are interested in joining

• Their joint action could save up to 5 Mt of CO2 annually.

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Industry Accelerator

• The Goal is to facilitate the implementation of Energy Management Systems, technologies and practices in global industrial energy use.

• The Accelerator focuses on:– Large energy intensive industries, &– Energy intensive SMEs.

• It is lead by UNIDO, TERI & IIP21

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Common Mission Statement of the Accelerators

• Accelerate action and commitment by national and sub-national leaders at the country, city, state, region and sector level.

• Provide tailor-made policy options, including roadmaps/Action Plans, and technical support leveraging best-in-class toolkits, databases and subject matter experts.

• Scale-up and facilitate energy efficiency investments by providing match-making services between technology and finance providers and country, city, state, region or sector level actors and support the mobilization of resources.

• Create a global network to exchange know-how, lessons learnt and best practices in energy efficiency.

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SE4ALL – EE engagement process

Jurisdictions (countries, cities, regions) will go through a process of identifying their engagement which will include a variety of phases:

1. Commitment, (Letter of intent, MoU)

2. Assessment, (recommended tools)

3. Development, (Action Plans, roadmaps)

4. Implementation, (“deep dive”)

5. Tracking/Reporting/Improvement

The EE Accelerator Platform engages with cities, sub-regions and countries.

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Energy Efficiency Accelerator Commitment?

National, sub-national and city governments commitments:• Doubling the rate of energy efficiency by 2030 in targeted

sectors within their jurisdiction.• Implementing one enabling policy and one demonstration project

to be announced at COP21 in Paris. • Creating a baseline of energy efficiency performance, agreeing

to track and report annual progress, and sharing experiences and best practices with other governments.

Business, NGO and international organization commitments:• Facilitate collaborative, multi-stakeholder workshops to define

and prioritize policy and project actions including government leadership, codes and standards, performance benchmarking and disclosure, third-party financing models and utility programs .

• Provide governments with technical support leveraging best-in-class tools, databases and subject matter experts.

• International financial partners will provide funding to support policy development and demonstration project implementation.

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Engagement Process - Light Touch and Deep Dive

Light TouchLight Touch

Deep DiveDeep Dive

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SE4ALL – Assessment + Development

There are two types of support by the Accelerator Platform of SE4All:

1)policy-level support (“light touch”) which helps the city or he region to identify energy efficiency priorities and to establish an Action Plan/road map; and

2)an Action Plan/road map implementation support (“deep dive”). The support is provided by the Accelerator’s conveners and the wider network of the SE4All Initiative, that most of the time also seek support from local actors. Partners include UN organisations (UNEP, UNIDO, and UNDP), development banks (World Bank, ADB, AfDB, EBRD, and IADB) as well private sector companies (Accenture, Danfoss, Dow Chemicals, Johnson Controls, Philips, and others).

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SE4All’s Goal for COP 21

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100 cities (20 from Asia)

100 companies

100 banks

Prior to COP 21, SE4ALL is seeking GHG emission-reduction commitments from:

100 countries

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SE4All - next steps for Asia

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SE4All is interested in more Asia – Pacific for Action-Agendas and Investment Prospectuses on country level

These AAs and IPs can/should cover: Access, Nexus Issues, RE but also Energy Efficiency (i.e. roadmaps pertaining to one or more of the EE Accelerator areas: buildings, lighting, transport, district energy, industry, appliances)

The Accelerator Platform stands ready to assistSE4All seeks commitments on energy efficiency

by countries, cities and businesses – COP 21

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Outlook, calendar, contacts

Commitment and Recognition OpportunitiesVienna Energy Forum 18- 20 June 2015 Regional Workshop in Singapore 27- 31 July 2015 (tbc)Regional Workshop in Japan 28-30 October 2015 G20 Leader`s Summit 15-16 November 2015COP21 – Paris 1-10 December 2015

For more information www.se4all.org Martin Niemetz

SE4All global support team in Vienna [email protected] Monika Froehler SE4All global support team in Vienna [email protected]

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Global Energy Efficiency Accelerator Platform Action Plans and Roadmaps

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SE4ALL – engagement process

Jurisdictions will go through a process of identifying their engagement which will include a variety of phases:

1. Commitment, (Letter of intent, MoU)

2. Assessment, (with recommended tools)

3. Development, (Action Plans, roadmaps)

4. Implementation, (“deep dive”)

5. Tracking/Reporting/Improvement

The Accelerator Platform engages with cities, sub-regions and countries.

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SE4ALL – engagement process

1. Commitment •The city, region or country wanting to engage first signs a letter of intent to subsequently formulating a non-binding Aide-Mémoire. Manila has already signed the letter of intent to be member of the Global Energy Efficiency Platform. SE4All engages with jurisdictions through a menu of policy options, and on key actions.

•The approach is based on the needs of the city or region, and the specific types of activities that the partnership can provide in each location.

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SE4ALL – engagement process

2. Assessment

SE4All involves its network of partners:-To undertake a high-level assessment, using available tools and data sources, of local opportunities to improve energy efficiency in various sectors by introducing different policies and programs (TRACE by ESMAP)

-To organize tailored presentations of best practices (polices, programs, metrics and technical solutions) in sectors of interest to the jurisdiction, selected from the Platform menu of options, that address local opportunities in an integrated manner

-To formulate recommendations for the jurisdiction pursuing specific programs/projects along with referrals for technical support, financial assistance and local capacity building from SE4All partner organizations.

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SE4ALL – engagement process

3. Development

The jurisdiction takes the lead in -Organising and facilitating a multi-stakeholder workshop focussed on specific sectors and areas identified by the assessment with resource persons from SE4All the respective platform partners -This workshop assists in preparing a preliminary plan of action for developing and implementing the specific energy efficiency programs or projects and proposals for technical and financial assistance from SE4All Partner organisations

4. Implementation-Access to state of the art technical solutions and best practice policy, program and project expertise through the Energy Efficiency Accelerator Platform partners.

5. Improvement -Establishing an energy efficiency performance baseline and tracking annual performance improvements .

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SE4ALL – engagement process short term goal

Cities and countries announce one enabling policy and one demonstration project by/at COP21 in Paris, to create a baseline of energy efficiency performance, to track and report annual progress, share experiences and best-practices with other governments.

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Thimphu City: TRACE – ESMAP World Bank

Tool for Rapid Assessment of City Energy (TRACE): Helping Cities Use Energy Efficiently

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Assessment Recommendation

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TRACE – ESMAP World Bank

SE4All recommends for Thimphu City:

•The Tool for Rapid Assessment of City Energy (TRACE)  by ESMAP World Bank,  is a decision-support tool designed to help cities quickly identify under-performing sectors, evaluate improvement and cost-saving potential, and prioritize sectors and actions for energy efficiency (EE) intervention. It covers six municipal sectors: passenger transport, municipal buildings, water and waste water, public lighting, solid waste, and power and heat. 

 •TRACE consists of three modules: an energy benchmarking module which compares key performance indicators (KPIs) among peer cities, a sector prioritization module which identifies sectors that offer the greatest potential with respect to energy-cost savings, and an intervention selection module which functions like a “playbook” of tried-and-tested EE measures and helps select locally appropriate EE interventions.

 •TRACE is designed with the intention to involve city decision makers in the deployment process. It starts with benchmark data collection, goes through an on-location assessment involving experts and decision makers, and ends with a final report to city authorities with recommendations of EE interventions tailored to the city’s individual context.

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What does TRACE do?

1. Energy Benchmarking

TRACE’s benchmarking module has a database of 28 KPIs collected from 93 cities.

2. Sector Prioritization

TRACE’s sector prioritization module uses "relative energy intensity," "sector energy spending," and "city authority control" to prioritize sectors with the most significant energy efficiency potential.

3. Intervention SelectionTRACE contains a set of 60 EE interventions which combine a blend of both high level strategic level programs and specific activities that a city can pursue.

The initial appraisal step enables the user to match city capability to the capabilities required to implement each recommendation. City officials can then select from the set of ranked recommendations.

The energy savings assessment step allows the user to quantify the potential energy savings using spreadsheets that come with TRACE, and the final review process allows the city authorities to assess the viability of recommendations in order to come up with a final list of actions for prioritized sectors.

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Examples of where has TRACE been deployed?

• Bosnia and Herzegovina: Banja Luka | Sarajevo• Brazil: Belo Horizonte | Rio de Janeiro• Colombia: Bogota | Medellin• Ethiopia: Addis Ababa• Georgia: Tbilisi• Ghana: Accra• Kenya: Nairobi• Kosovo: Pristina• Indonesia: Surabaya• Macedonia: Skopje• Mexico: Leon | Puebla• Philippines: Cebu | Quezon City• Romania: Brașov | Cluj-Napoca | Craiova | Iași | Ploiești | Timișoara• Serbia: Belgrade• Sri Lanka: Colombo• Turkey: Gaziantep• Vietnam: Da Nang

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TRACE in Action

• In Turkey, TRACE helped define the Sustainable Cities pillar in the World Bank’s Country Partnership Strategy for Turkey for 2012-15. Since then, the TRACE findings have informed the World Bank’s US$300 million programmatic lending to cities in Turkey.

• In Brazil, TRACE was implemented in Rio de Janeiro and Belo Horizonte. In the latter, the findings have been incorporated in the city’s strategy and the “traffic optimization” recommendation has been implemented. In Rio de Janeiro, the World Bank’s Presidential Cities Task Force is preparing specific investments in the public lighting and buildings sectors, which were identified by TRACE as having the largest EE potential.

• In Vietnam, the World Bank used TRACE to create city-level case studies, the results of which were subsequently used to create Sustainable Urban Energy Program Guidelines for cities across the East Asia and Pacific region.

• In Romania, a World Bank team is deploying TRACE in seven fast-growing cities as part of the Romania Regional Development Program funded by the European Union. TRACE is being used to identify the specific investments to be funded under the program.

• In Kenya, TRACE is being used to identify EE investments and prepare Nairobi’s EE action

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Is there training support to use TRACE?

• A TRACE e-learning course was created in partnership with the World Bank Institute.  http://einstitute.worldbank.org/ei/course/trace-how-use-tool-rapid-assessment-city-energy

• ESMAP also provides group training to cities or implementing agencies planning to use TRACE.

• ESMAP offers facilitated courses for free to users planning to use TRACE. These are offered online at a specified time to users around the world. Please contact [email protected] if you are interested in the facilitated course.

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