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Renewable Energy to Eliminate Energy Poverty and Mitigate a Climate Catastrophe Stalactites of soot from an indoor cook stove Name____________ Peace Corps______ Date______________
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Module A 1. Challenges: Energy Poverty & Rapid Climate Change 2. Solution: Renewable Energy Module B 1. Steps to developing a renewable energy project Module C 1. Examples of Successful Renewable Energy Projects Agenda
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Challenges photo by PowerMundo
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Rapid Climate Change Whiteearth.org
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Energy Access & A Climate Catastrophe http://www.masterresource.org/2009/12/electricity-for-the-poor-what-they-really-ought-to-focus-on-in-copenhagen/ 1.4 Billion People Without Electricity* & 3 Billion Cooking on Biomass** *http://www.iea.org/weo/electricity.asp, **http://cleancookstoves.orghttp://www.iea.org/weo/electricity.asphttp://cleancookstoves.org Consider Impacts of More Energy from Fossil Fuel or Renewable Energy
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"Most of the observed increase in globally averaged temperature since the mid-20th century is very likely due to the observed increase in anthropogenic [human-caused] greenhouse gas concentrations," the IPCC 207 4 th Assessment Report “Hundreds of climate experts and government representatives from 113 countries labored …to reach unanimous agreement on the wording of each sentence in the 20-page summary for policymakers.” Humans and Climate Change http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/02/070202-global-warming.html/ “Very likely” translates to 90% probability* Humans “very likely” responsible for climate change Discuss: What are the reasons that people contest the science?
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* photo: http://rst.gsfc.nasa.gov/Sect16/Sect16_1.html, photo: http://rst.gsfc.nasa.gov/Sect16/Sect16_1.html Survival - Extinctions Happen About health & survival for people, life, & ecosystems ‘Earth will be just fine…..its the life on earth that may suffer’
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Energy Poverty: “The lack of adequate, accessible and affordable energy to promote economic growth and satisfy basic human needs* Energy Poverty & Development **http://www.ofid.org/publications/PDF/EN_Energy_Poverty.pdf / ** Ambuj D. Sagar "Alleviating Energy Poverty for the World's Poor“ Journal Article, Energy Policy, volume 33, issue 11, pages 1367-1372Ambuj D. Sagar Energy Policy “Improving energy services for poor households in developing countries remains one of the most pressing challenges facing the development community.”**
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Number of people without access to electricity *earthtrends.wri.org/text/energy-resources/variable-1379.html Data not found for Suriname Guyana http://www.estandardsforum.org/system/briefs/262/original/brief-Guyana.pdf?1254987843
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Number of people cooking with biomass Data not found for Suriname Guyana www.ehponline.org/docs/2006/8603/abstract.html
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Electrification in Peace Corps Communities * Taken from Peace Corps Regional offices response to survey Jan 2011 CountryElectrification* Costa Rica99% Peru95% Nicaragua95% Suriname90% Dominican Republic 89% rural / 99% urban Panama60%
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Personal Impacts of Energy Poverty Story Corps Activity
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Energy Poverty
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Impacts of Energy Poverty Planet (Environmental) Profit (Economic) People (Social) Impacts Activity
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Planet (Environmental) Profit (Economic) People (Social) - Increased deforestation rates - Indoor Air Pollution - Dirty living environment - Disease, illness and death - Less time at night to study - Unable to see hazards (wild animals, criminals) - Lack of access to modern health services vaccines - Leads to migration to cities - exacerbates gender inequality - no access to information technology - less work hours - no access to electrical tools - decrease in agriculture yields - decrease in worker productivity - correlation to poverty Impacts of Energy Poverty
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354 MW Luz SEGS Built 1984-1991 A Solution: Renewable Energy photo- http://www.ashdenawards.org/winners/TECNOSOL10 photo by PowerMundo
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Benefits of Renewable Energy in Developing Countries Planet (Environmental) Profit (Economic) People (Social) Benefits Activity
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Potential Benefits of Renewable Energy Planet (Environmental) Profit (Economic) People (Social) - Decreased CO2 emissions - Decreased deforestation rates - Climate Change prevention - Population stabilization - Reduce fossil fuel resource conflicts or wars - Promote equal opportunities - Improve educational opportunities - Reduced illness and accidents from fossil fuels - Illumination for Safety - Urban to rural migration - New jobs, more jobs - New industries - Energy cost savings - Greater wage potential - Increased worker productivity - Energy Security - More working hours - Improve existing businesses
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Additional Slides
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Potential Impacts of Rapid Climate Change (Will Vary) Planet (Environmental) Profit (Economic) People (Social) Impacts Activity
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Potential Impacts of Rapid Climate Change (will vary) - Increase in agricultural cost and risk - Increase water and food costs - Increase in property damage and loses - Increase health cost - Higher energy cost (more AC) - Infrastructure cost - Decrease in ecotourism - Soil degradation - Rising seas, lakes, oceans - Increase of natural disaster intensity - Extreme weather - Floods - Ocean Acidification - Increase in weeds, pests, pathogens - Decrease in Biodiversity - Population migration - Wars for Resources and land - Increase morbidity and mortality - exacerbate inequalities within countries* - Food shortages, hunger Deminish Natural Capital Source: United Nations Development Programme, 'Fighting climate change—human solidarity in a divided world', Human Development Report 2007–08, UNDP, 2008, p. 8.http://hdr.undp.org/en/media/hdr_20072008_summary_english.pdf.http://hdr.undp.org/en/media/hdr_20072008_summary_english.pdf Planet (Environmental) Profit (Economic) People (Social)
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