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Global Network On Energy for Sustainable Development Energy for Poverty Reduction CSD14 New York, May 2006.

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Presentation on theme: "Global Network On Energy for Sustainable Development Energy for Poverty Reduction CSD14 New York, May 2006."— Presentation transcript:

1 Global Network On Energy for Sustainable Development Energy for Poverty Reduction CSD14 New York, May 2006

2 Partnership in Practice GNESD – a Partnership of Centres of excellence –Objectives and approach –Member Centres –Activity focus How we work Priority Thematic Programmes Building capacity – having policy impacts

3 The GNESD Focus Energy for the Achievement of the Millennium Development Goals Energy for Poverty Alleviation Sustainable Energy Production and Consumption

4 An action oriented partnership GNESD: A Type II partnership of the WSSD GNESD Objective: to promote sustainable development and poverty alleviation by expanding the knowledge base about environmentally sound provision of energy services. To achieve this objective the Network promotes: information exchange; learning, analysis and study; policy support; capacity building; and advocacy, with a focus on issues of concern to developing countries.

5 Accountability & Transparency GNESD Structure: Steering Committee Secretariat Network Members -Established Energy Centres -Energy Research Institutions Network Partners -Government agencies -UN organizations / IGOs -International Development Banks -Existing regional energy networks -NGOs -Private sector companies and industry associations -Donors Ad Hoc Working Groups Network Assembly

6 A Global Network = Strength AEA Technology (UK) AFREPREN (Kenya) Asian Institute of Technology (Thailand) Fundación Bariloche (Argentina) Energy Research Centre (South Africa) Energy Research Centre of the Netherlands (Netherlands) Energy Research Group, American University of Beirut (Lebanon) Energy Research Institute (China) Environmental Development Action in the Third World, (Senegal) Fraunhofer Institute (Germany) Institute of Energy Economics (Japan) Institute of Energy Policy and Economics Université Pierre Mendès-France, (France) International Institute for Industrial Environmental Economics, Lund University (Sweden) KFA Research Centre Jülich (Germany) Mediterranean Renewable Energy Centre MEDREC (Tunisia) National Renewable Energy Laboratory (USA) Stockholm Environment Institute – Boston Center (USA) Energy and Resources Institute (India) The University of São Paulo and the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) UNEP RISO Centre (Denmark) University of the South Pacific (Fiji)

7 Partnering to achieve results GNESD is collaborating with key partnerships to increase synergies and impacts : Policy analysis result implementation and analysis needs feed-back Regional information & Outreach –Project review support –Joint workshops –African GNESD Centres support project development for EU energy facility

8 2005 Milestones Energy Access Access – Research Phase –Technical reports from all 8 participating Centres Access – Dissemination Phase –Data compilation – (completed in 2004) –Bonn RE 2004 Conference papers – (completed in 2004) –Journal articles – Special issue of ESD Journal –UNDP component on outreach and networking – draft assessment report Access – Implementation –In-depth analysis of key policy options by Centres – undertaken early 2005. –Draft reports currently under peer review –Early 2006 comparative assessment and policy summary

9 2005 Milestones Renewable Energy and Poverty RE Research Phase –Technical reports by 9 participating centres –Comparative assessment –Policy summary –Flyers and newsletter RE Policy Options Phase –Key options identified and 9 Centres resumed in October Regional Workshops on Electricity & Development (In collaboration with UNEP/URC, UNDP & IEA) –Bangkok - AIT –Rio de Janeiro - COPPE –Nairobi - AFREPREN Summary report of main workshop findings MDG scoping paper by Co-Chairs

10 2006 Milestones Thematic activities: Finalisation of access policy options phase (1st quarter) Finalisation of RE policy options phase (4th quarter) New activities for second half of 2006 Regional workshops on RE and Poverty (Argentina, Senegal & India, second half of 2006) Initiation of new theme on peri urban energy and security of supply RE Statistics with IEA & GEF, as possible seperate project activity Capacity building of Centres

11 Results & Impact GNESD has established a an effective South-South partnership and has taken part in and influenced discussions at global events GNESD results are quoted in publications from major energy institutions like the World Energy Council, the World Bank, REN21, the International Energy Agency, etc. GNESD has helped moving debate forward in new and less understood subjects, e.g. the impacts of power reform on the poor. The GNESD findings documented that reforms often have had negative consequences on them. Appropriate policies and sequencing of reforms can yield positive results. Findings created controversy, but have since become generally accepted.

12 Impact Examples Contribution to national policy documents and approaches –Electricity tariff policy in Lebanon –Pro-poor rural electrification in Kenya –Renewable energy law in China Review of tariffs to ensure explicit subsidies for the poor (Lebanon) Access work used by national institutions –Utilities in Argentina –Energy Secretariat of Argentina Establishment or strengthening of close links with government ministries and other institutions

13 Thank you www.gnesd.org


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