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Clean Cooking Fuels Business Models: Lessons from Distributed Electrification? Hisham Zerriffi Liu Institute for Global Issues IAEE Pre-Conference Workshop on Clean Cooking Fuels, Istanbul, Turkey 6/16/2008
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International Association of Energy Economics, Istanbul, Turkey (June 2008) 2 Distributed Rural Electrification Rural populations: Low income Low income Remote and Dispersed Remote and Dispersed Low consumption Low consumption Grid extension expensive Often low resources and managerial capacity Distributed generation technologies: Scalable Scalable Small networks or individual installations Small networks or individual installations Range of possible actors and models Range of possible actors and models
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International Association of Energy Economics, Istanbul, Turkey (June 2008) 3 State of Research Technology Specific Analyses Technology Specific Analyses (Allderdice and Rogers 2000, van Campen, Guidi et al. 2000; Li, Xing et al. 2001) Micro-level Project Reports Micro-level Project Reports (Green, Wilson et al. 2001; Santos and Zilles 2001; Stroup 2005) Business Success Stories Business Success Stories (ESMAP 2001) Common Characteristics: Ad-hoc Ad-hoc Limited to specific technology, region, outcome, end- use, etc. Limited to specific technology, region, outcome, end- use, etc. Don’t treat institutional issues systematically Don’t treat institutional issues systematically (Hurst 1990; Erickson and Chapman 1995; Allderdice and Rogers 2000; Martinot, Chaurey et al. 2002; Etcheverry 2003; Fishbein 2003)
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International Association of Energy Economics, Istanbul, Turkey (June 2008) 4 Study Framework
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International Association of Energy Economics, Istanbul, Turkey (June 2008) 5 Variation in Case Characteristics Brazil (6 Cases) Cambodia (6 Cases) China (6 Cases) Organizational Form Dominant: Centralized Utilities Alternative: Coops, NGOs, small entrepreneurs Dominant : Small entrepreneurs Alternative: government and international donor projects Dominant: Local governmental and private, some hybrid/dual Alternative: decentralized private tech dealers, centralized governmental Technology Choice Dominant: Diesel Alternative: Biomass, PV Dominant: Diesel Alternative: Biomass, PV, small hydro Dominant: Small hydropower Alternative: Small thermal, PV, wind Target Customer Base Dominant: Households Alternative: Varied Dominant: village electrification Alternative: households Dominant: village and higher electrification Alternative: individual systems Financial structure Dominant: Subsidized connections and low income consumers Alternative: Market Prices with cost recovery Dominant: Market prices Alternative: Highly subsidized Dominant: Cost-plus regulated prices Alternative: Subsidized, cash markets
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International Association of Energy Economics, Istanbul, Turkey (June 2008) 6 Lesson I: Observations Are Not Analysis Need to move beyond anecdotal evidence CCF Implications: Continued case study research required Systematic study across cases required
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International Association of Energy Economics, Istanbul, Turkey (June 2008) 7 Lesson II: Free Lunches Are Not Sustainable Need to have some level of cost-recovery and financial sustainability. CCF Implications: Capital cost subsidies should be market enhancing rather than market destroying Necessary to have “buy-in” Consumption subsidies should be avoided when possible
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International Association of Energy Economics, Istanbul, Turkey (June 2008) 8 Lesson III: Electrons Do Not Equal Development Focus on how electrification fits into larger development goals. Renewables and conventional generation sources should compete equally to meet rural development needs. CCF Implications: Need mix of technologies suited to improving local conditions (e.g. biogas, LPG, improved stoves) Need to assess synergies between household cooking fuels and community or productive needs
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International Association of Energy Economics, Istanbul, Turkey (June 2008) 9 Lesson IV: Think Globally, Act Locally Rural electrification is an important country-wide and global objective Often best achieved through local means. CCF Implications: Implementation dependent upon local conditions (e.g. resource availability, incomes) Requires strong central support from governments and industry
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International Association of Energy Economics, Istanbul, Turkey (June 2008) 10 Lesson V: Unbias the Social Contract Provision of services should be based on performance, not size. New institutional mechanisms need to be created to include local actors CCF Implications: Involvement of private sector Involvement of local public sector, entrepreneurs and other actors
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