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Energy Poverty Maritta Koch-Weser London Clean Energy Roundtable, April 7, 2005 www.earth3000.orgwww.earth3000.org; www.gexsi.orgwww.gexsi.org
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London Clean Energy Roundtable, April 7, 2005, Dr. Maritta Koch-Weser, The Global Exchange for Social Investment 2 Energy Poverty Significance Characteristics “Bottom-of-the Pyramid” Clean Energy Needs Systemic Opportunities A 2015 Clean Energy Drive?
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London Clean Energy Roundtable, April 7, 2005, Dr. Maritta Koch-Weser, The Global Exchange for Social Investment 3 Energy Poverty-Significance Johannesburg UN WSSD 2002 concept advanced – but slow take-up London 2005 ?
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London Clean Energy Roundtable, April 7, 2005, Dr. Maritta Koch-Weser, The Global Exchange for Social Investment 4 Energy Poverty-Significance 1.7 bn people without electricity Unreliable energy supplies undermine “value added” development path of some 50% of world population - vast hinterland regions The poor are disproportionately affected by polluting energy sources (indoor & transport pollution)
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London Clean Energy Roundtable, April 7, 2005, Dr. Maritta Koch-Weser, The Global Exchange for Social Investment 5 Energy Poverty-Significance Clean Energy at the core of The United Nations “Millennium Development Goals” (MDGs) to halve extreme poverty by 2015 employment education health communication
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London Clean Energy Roundtable, April 7, 2005, Dr. Maritta Koch-Weser, The Global Exchange for Social Investment 6 Energy Poverty-Characteristics “Bottom-of-the Pyramid Needs” Rural: Decentralized, largely off-grid systems –Low Cost / accessible Purchase Plans –Sturdy & Easy to maintain –Culturally compatible –Integrated solutions (e.g. waste & energy, hybrid renewable energy sources) –Fast, un-cumbersome solutions for scaling up Energy+ –Internet –TV –Mobile telephony –Education-by-satellite –Distance Health Care –Local production units Urban –Clean Transport –Clean Heat & Cooking
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London Clean Energy Roundtable, April 7, 2005, Dr. Maritta Koch-Weser, The Global Exchange for Social Investment 7 Energy Poverty Systemic Opportunities Potential Power of Public-Private Interplay: –Regulatory Advances (public) –Banking (Microfinance) –Technological Innovations (industry R&D) –Local Leadership & Social Organization (NGOs, Social Entrepreneurs) Citizen & Corporate Social Investment & Giving, e.g. –E-Giving (utilities offer major opportunities) –Orsa Model (1% of turnover) –Social Investment & Venture Funds –Social Investment Intermediaries Ambition beyond Pilots –From AID to (a huge) real Market –Scale, Pace, Space
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London Clean Energy Roundtable, April 7, 2005, Dr. Maritta Koch-Weser, The Global Exchange for Social Investment 8 Energy Poverty Systemic Opportunities Opportunities vs. Bottlenecks Potential Power of Public-Private Interplay: –Regulatory Advances do not focus on poorest –Governance, transparency –Banking: shy of workload, technical & social risks –Waste of time: Technological Innovations wait too long before they are picked up in the market –Local Leadership & Social Organization (NGOs, Social Entrepreneurs) – opportunity not picked up by investors Citizen & Corporate Social Investment & Giving, e.g. –E-Giving – not taken to scale –CSR more cosmetic than Orsa Model (1% of turnover) –Social Investment & Venture Funds lack Investment Guarantee Instruments –Social Investment Intermediaries – not yet part of market routine Beyond Pilots –AID projects are not designed in consultation with industry –Many excellent pilots remain “pilots forever”
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London Clean Energy Roundtable, April 7, 2005, Dr. Maritta Koch-Weser, The Global Exchange for Social Investment 9 Energy Poverty A 2015 Clean Energy Drive? London 2005 Could a common 2015 MDG Energy Poverty Platform make a difference?
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London Clean Energy Roundtable, April 7, 2005, Dr. Maritta Koch-Weser, The Global Exchange for Social Investment 10 Energy Poverty Thank you
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