Carsten Hellpap, Program Manager, EnDev, GIZ
Transcription
Carsten Hellpap, Program Manager, EnDev, GIZ
Incorporating energy access into climate financing ‐ the experience of EnDev ‐ What is Energising Development (EnDev) ? A Partnership Program of six donors with the overall objective to facilitate access to modern energy services and technologies Strong joint commitment to achieve a defined minimum number of people and additional other targets First Phase: 2005 – 2009 Objective: 3.1 million people Budget: 60 million EUR Second Phase: 2010 – 2015 Objective: 13 million people Budget: 200 million EUR Third Phase: 2015 – 2019 Objective: (18 million people) Budget: (100 million EUR) 2 EnDev structure Governing Board Irish Aid ACPEU-EF DEZA DFAT DFID MFA -NO DGIS BMZ co-financing and co-governing based on MoU commissioning International Energising Development Programme Bolivia, Indonesia, Ethiopia, others cooperation with international initiatives: Lighting Africa, AEEP, AEI, EUEI-PDF, … GIZ GOV Private sector GIZ + RVO SNV / others G O NG O CB O Cooperation with national programmes in partner countries Management Country Implementation 3 Objectives/Commitments of EnDev EnDev 2 (2010 – 2015) Access: For every 20 EUR spent at least 1 person will have sustainable access to modern energy technologies and services (13 million people for EnDev 1+2) Health/Gender: The health burden of smoke and soot in kitchens is reduced by at least 50% for 3,000,000 people, among them 2,000,000 women and children. Quality: Technologies and services promoted by EnDev comply with international standards (energy efficiency, emissions, safety) Pro-Poor Market: Enterprises in EnDev partner countries increase their turnover related to energy technologies promoted by the programme by 10% annually on average, excluding turnover financed by the EnDev programme itself. Climate: The promoted technologies are on average at least 50% more climate friendly with respect to their utility value than baseline technologies (e.g. emission per lumen, emissions per meal prepared, etc.). 4 Objectives/Commitments of EnDev EnDev 3 (2015 – 2019) For every 100,000 EUR program budget and as result of EnDev activities Access: 5,000 persons, 10 social institutions and 20 enterprises have gained sustainable access to modern energy technologies or services for the first time. Health: 300 poor households use cooking systems significantly reducing the health burden caused by smoke and soot (cooking systems of level „tier 2“ according to the SE4All classification or a comparable system). Job and Income Generation: 5 jobs in the partner country are directly created along the value chain of supported energy technologies or as a result from benefitting from the access to modern energy technologies. Promotion of Renewable Energies: 500 Watt (W) of electrical power based on renewable energy or at least 800 renewable energy technologies are installed. Leveraging investments: 200,000 EUR are spent for renewable energy technologies by private households, the private sector and the public sector. Climate: the annual CO2 equivalents (CO2e) emission is reduced or avoided by 400 tons (t) through applying the supported technologies. 5 Who is benefiting from EnDev? EnDev provides: ‐ Energy for households ‐ Energy for social institutions ‐ Energy for enterprises Predominantly in rural areas Solar Micro Hydro Power Biogas Stoves Grid extension/ densification 6 Regional Distribution of EnDev Projects 24 countries – 15 Africa, 5 Asia, 4 Latin America Solar Hydro Bolivia Honduras Nicaragua Peru Biogas Benin Burkina Faso Liberia Mali Ghana Senegal Cooking energy Burundi Ethiopia Kenya Madagascar Malawi Mozambique Rwanda Tanzania Uganda Grid extension/ densification Bangladesh Cambodia Indonesia Nepal Vietnam 7 Performance based approach of EnDev No fixed country budgets instead Funds for country activities are linked to project performance Assessment of country proposals Financing promising basic country activities Bi-annual monitoring and assessment of performance Up-scaling according to performance learning 8 Strengths and Consequences of the Approach General Strength Strong focus on results High degree of flexibility in delivering aid allowing to learn and adapt quickly Specific Strength Benchmarking and competition regarding sustainable outcome, impact and cost efficiency between countries, regions, technologies and approaches resulting in a strong local commitment of partner organisations, private sector and customers High implementation speed Stimulation of innovative solutions Testing and integrating innovative approaches (e.g. RBF) Development of a rigorous monitoring system (2x per year, >50% of beneficiaries registered individually) 9 What have we achieved so far? (June 2014) 10 Tiers of electricity access outcomes Tier 5 4 3 2 1 Services Typical system tier 4 services plus use of devices typically requiring a few kilowatt like grid air conditioners tier 3 services plus use of devices typically requiring a kilowatt like water limited grid heaters, irons tier 2 services plus use of devices minigrid typically requiring a few hundred watt like rice cookers, refrigerators bright light, radio, telephone plus use solar home of devices typically requiring tens of system watts like TV, video, fan picoPV, medium bright light and, if possible, battery limited radio use and telephone charging charging station total Number of people 245,666 191,371 128,393 1,334,496 222,439 2,122,365 11 EnDev Outcome Monitoring Procedure (1) 1. Data Collection on target group level List of customer/ beneficiaries from NGO/salesman or counting of beneficiaries in villages Beneficiary must be identifiable (Minimum information: full name and address; if possible GPS data) Outcome Monitoring 2. Data quality control Spot checks in the field and plausibility checks of gross figures Data transfer to EnDev Head Office through wiki entries and excel files Country Sheet Data transfer to EnDev Country Project EnDev Monitoring Sheet Name, Village (GPS) EnDev Country Project Numbers of beneficiaries 12 13 14 30.03.2015 15 Adjustment of numbers Outcome Monitoring The gross figures provided by the project are adjusted by taking into account: a “sustainability adjustment factor,” which takes into consideration that the access provided to modern energy technologies is not sustainable in all cases a “windfall gain factor” considering that some households supported by EnDev would have gained access to modern energy services anyway even without support a “double energy factor”, which accounts for beneficiaries which already have access to modern energy services in the same category (modern cooking energy technologies or electricity); a “double EnDev counting factor”, which ensures that beneficiaries availing from both modern cooking energy and electricity through the EnDev programme are only counted once in the aggregate figure. 16 Effects of adjustments Milllion Reported and Adjusted total number of household members provided by EnDev 25.0 22.90 20.0 ‐43% 15.0 12.96 10.0 5.0 0.0 Reported Adjusted 17 Identified Gender‐related impacts • Increased female employment (Benin) • Income generating activities of HH (Bangladesh, Honduras) • Increased responsibility for income and savings (Senegal) Economic develop‐ ment • Increased study time, but no differences between boys and girls (Bangladesh, Mozambique) • Unchanged literacy rate (Bangladesh) Educa ‐tion Social & political empowerment • Improved working conditions (Ethiopia, Benin) • No difference in recreational activities (Bangladesh) • Increased (perception of) safety (Bangladesh, Senegal) Quality of life Health improve‐ ment • Respiratory health improvements (self reported in several studies) • Decrease of eye infections and headaches (self‐ reported in several studies) May 16, 2014 ‐ PowerPoint Guidelines.ppt 18 How does EnDev work? Sustainable pro poor markets for off‐grid energy technologies Government (National and Regional) and public institutions Necessary infrastructure Education system Access to human capital Finance Institutions Favorable administrative and regulatory environment Business Develop‐ ment Services Access to finance Research/inno‐ vation centers Access to innovations & knowledge (technology, market) Capable entrepreneurs (producers, distributors, service providers) Public support programmes (loans, grants, knowledge) Affordable off‐ grid products and services consumer organization Public Media Access to knowledge (properties/benefit of technology/service, quality, reasonable price) Interested & informed customers 19 Key activities of country projects • Capacity building of governmental and non governmental organisations • Facilitating construction/installation of power generation and dissemination systems • Facilitating business to business contacts • Technical and business training of importers, distributors, retailers, customers • Quality testing • Market studies and surveys • Awareness raising, customer protection information (quality, warranty, after sales service) • Different financing schemes: direct/indirect subsidies, advanced market commitment, • Result Based Financing for Investors/operators/private enterprises 20 Possible synergies between SREP and EnDev Examples: 1. SREP provides funding for private sector investment EnDev provides RBF specifically for rural and poor households 2. SREP supports installation of mini‐grids in large scale EnDev is providing technical assistance in the planning, installation and operation of the mini‐grids 3. SREP is scaling up successful pilots through considerable funding EnDev is testing pilots requiring in the initial phase technical assistance and close technical follow up. 21 Thank you for your attention. Funded by: Coordinated by: 22