Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                
SlideShare a Scribd company logo

1

e4sv.org
GLOBAL INSIGHTS INTO INNOVATIVE
CLIMATE-SMART ENERGY FOR ASIA
June 2017
Presenter: Molly Hurley-Dépret

2

e4sv.org
OUTLINE OF PRESENTATION
■The Smart Villages Initiative
■Lessons from our engagement in Asia
■Innovative examples: business models,
technology, and policy
■Lessons Asia can draw from other regions
■Final policy messages

3

e4sv.org
SMART
VILLAGES
SMART
CITIES
47% of world’s
population and
70% of the world’s
poor live in rural
villages
• Grid connection is not always
sustainable for remote communities
• Decentralised model can bring
advantages
• Opportunity/need to combine
energy access with holistic
development
ENERGY AS A CATALYST
FOR DEVELOPMENT

4

e4sv.org
SMART VILLAGES: SOME KEY FEATURES
Key services: education, health , clean water and sanitation
 ICT connectivity: distance learning and world’s knowledge base
 Modern health services and tele-medicine
 Provision of clean water and safe sanitation
Foster entrepreneurship in the provision and use of energy services
 Capture more of the agricultural value chain
 Create new businesses
Through ICT connectivity, participate in governance processes
 At local, regional and national levels
 Smart communities with strong rural/urban linkages
Building more resilient communities better able to
respond to shocks

5

e4sv.org
THE SMART VILLAGES INITIATIVE
Focus: sustainable local energy solutions for rural
communities
Policy advice: an insightful, ‘view from the frontline’ of
the challenges of village energy provision for
development, and how they can be overcome
Engagement: bringing together the key players:
scientists, entrepreneurs, villagers, NGO’s, financers,
regulators and policy makers etc:
 What are the barriers?
 How can they be overcome?
 What messages to funders and policy makers?

6

e4sv.org
SIX REGIONAL ENGAGEMENT PROGRAMMES
 East Africa – June 2014
 SE Asia – January 2015
 South Asia – April 2015
 South America – January 2016
 West Africa – May 2016
 Central America/Caribbean –
November 2016
12-18 month engagement
programmes:
 Workshops → reports/policy
briefs
 Briefing meetings
 Capacity building event
 Media workshop
 Entrepreneurial competition
 Final event pulling together key
stakeholders

7

e4sv.org
ACTIVITIES ACROSS ASIA
■ Opening workshop – January 2015, Kuching, Malaysia
■ Additional workshops held in Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bangladesh,
Myanmar, Thailand, Indonesia, Philippines, Singapore, Korea, Malaysia
■ Addressing disaster resilience, cookstoves, island energy needs, energy-
water-sanitation nexus, energy-agriculture nexus, business models,
innovative technologies etc.
■ Impact studies in Malaysia with UNIMAS
■ Entrepreneurs scaling-up competition in India
■ Schoolchildren’s poster competition in Pakistan

8

e4sv.org
LESSONS FROM OUR WORKSHOPS IN ASIA ON
OFF-GRID & CLIMATE-SMART ENERGY
■ Solar home systems
■ Rapidly advancing technology / price drop
■ But need quality assurance
■ Micro-hydro more relevant in parts of Asia than elsewhere, but lacking business models
■ Mini-grids
■ Financing remains a critical issue
■ Some companies are working in this area but patient capital + availability of debt
remains problematic – need for public sector commitment and regulatory / policy clarity
■ Local capacity building and community engagement are key
■ Cooking
■ Need to enhance product quality
■ Need more studies of health / environmental impacts
■ Technical / business support
■ Water-food-energy nexus
■ Closely linked but often dealt with via sectoral approaches
■ Smallholder farmers & farming communities in particular
■ Building resilience
■ Unique needs of island / mountain / “most remote” communities

9

e4sv.org
INNOVATIVE EXAMPLES FROM ASIA (1)
■ SNV: National Biogas Programme in Vietnam since 2003
■ 158,500 domestic biogas digesters
■ Access to a clean, renewable and reliable source of energy
for more than 790,000 rural individuals across 55
provinces and cities of Vietnam
■ 2,500 new jobs in rural Vietnam
■ Trained nearly 1,700 biogas masons and supported 355
biogas construction team leaders create biogas businesses
■ Provided pre-installation training to 164,525
households. Provided training on post-installation and use
of bio-slurry to 161,397 households
■ Reduced around 800,000 tonnes of CO2 equivalent per
year
■ Successfully registered with the Voluntary Gold Standard
Awarded with 1,290,876 carbon credits under Gold
Standard Voluntary Emission Reductions 2013-15
http://www.snv.org/project/vietnam-biogas-programme

10

e4sv.org
INNOVATIVE EXAMPLES FROM ASIA (2)
■ IBEKA (The People-Centered Economic and
Business Institute), Indonesia – led by Tri Mumpuni
and Iskander Kuntoadji
■ Notable for their strong community training/education
focus in micro-hydro and engineering
■ IBEKA partners with rural communities to construct
micro-hydro plants to produce electricity.
■ IBEKA also trains villagers to operate and maintain these
hydro plants.
■ Just one example: the Hydro Empowerment Network
offers many more examples across South and Southeast
Asia

11

e4sv.org
INNOVATIVE EXAMPLES FROM ASIA (3)
■ BOOND, Rajasthan, India: Founder: Rustam
Sengupta
■ Micro-utility model with mini-grids; Pay back
period 3.5-4 years (US$4.5 million in revenue
and produces 8-10 MW per year
■ Impacting more than 100,000 individuals and
many small-scale enterprises.
■ People can service their own batteries: training
■ Challenges remain for companies no longer in
the start up phase
■ To keep it affordable / profitable, the mini-grid
does not power motor-based machinery

12

e4sv.org
INNOVATIVE EXAMPLES FROM ASIA (4)
■ Sunlabob, Laos / Hong Kong-based company,
led by Andy Schroeter
■ Example of company that meets both on- and
off-grid BOP needs – began with off-grid
focus in Laos
■ Has installed more than 10,000 systems in
over 500 villages and locations in Laos
■ Solar lanterns, solar home systems, solar
water pumps, solar water purification, street
lights…
■ Also notable for strong local inclusion +
hands-on capacity building for long-term
sustainability: technical training, accounting &
bookkeeping skills to maintain village-run
energy micro-enterprises

13

e4sv.org
INNOVATIVE EXAMPLES FROM ASIA (5)
■ Thailand: The Integrated ICT and Renewable
Energy Project under the Royal Initiative of Her
Royal Princess Siridhorn: Pioneer classroom at
Learning Center, Village of Khirilom
■ This project focuses on a border area of Thailand / Myanmar
■ This border region includes some of the last villages to receive
electrification in Thailand
■ The current project is to electrify 20 villages with the
cooperation of the government, researchers, and mobile
operators
■ Khirilom is about 2 hours drive from Chumphon
■ This village is powered by a nearby waterfall
■ In addition to electrification, education is central to the project –
border guards teach at local schools and computers are
powered as well

14

e4sv.org
INNOVATIVE EXAMPLES FROM ASIA (6)
■ EcoEnergy, Pakistan: Co-founded by Shazia Khan and
Jeremy Higgs
■ Founded in 2010
■ Collected data for four years in 2,200 villages and 44,000
households prior to launching business
■ Created mapping tool post-survey to show how many hours
per day people received electricity, who was off-grid, etc.
■ Pioneered PAYG for Pakistan: now a 95% repayment rate
■ Can help unbanked customers develop credit rating
■ Shifted business model from solar lanterns to solar home
systems, with strong focus on small businesses
■ Shifted to a social enterprise model and are fundraising to
meet goal of serving 50,000 customers over the next 3
years
■ Banks – risk averse

15

e4sv.org
LESSONS FROM OTHER GLOBAL REGIONS
■ East Africa: The strength of the PAYG model for solar home
systems or pico solar, use of mobile money, and relative openness
to market-driven solutions compared to many other regions
■ West Africa: Productive uses of energy, especially in the agricultural
sector (ex.: Bonergie adding value to papaya); this also cuts across
all the other regions
■ Latin America: Most have access…but remote communities (e.g.,
Amazon, Haiti) are still left behind. Government leadership crucial
but market-driven solutions also possible
■ Cross-cutting issue: Resilience – clearly reflected in island
contexts, such as the Caribbean, but also in Ecuador (earthquake),
parts of East and West Africa (drought), etc.

16

e4sv.org
SOME KEY CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
■ Decentralised approach can viable alternative to grid
connection, not just an interim measure
■ Decentralised approach can bring unique benefits (resilience)
■ Supportive policy & regulatory frameworks and political
commitment
■ An integrated approach
■ Community engagement & leadership
■ Complementary interventions
■ Taking gender into account

17

e4sv.org
SOME KEY CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS (2)
■ Access to finance & support to entrepreneurs
■ Increasing awareness
■ Sharing experiences domestically and
internationally
■ Capacity building
■ Moving from charity to markets
■ Acknowledge that market-based solutions won’t
work for certain “most-remote” communities

18

e4sv.org
Thank you for your attention
www.e4sv.org | info@e4sv.org | @e4SmartVillages

More Related Content

ACEF2017 Global Insights into Innovative Climate Smart Energy for Asia

  • 1. e4sv.org GLOBAL INSIGHTS INTO INNOVATIVE CLIMATE-SMART ENERGY FOR ASIA June 2017 Presenter: Molly Hurley-Dépret
  • 2. e4sv.org OUTLINE OF PRESENTATION ■The Smart Villages Initiative ■Lessons from our engagement in Asia ■Innovative examples: business models, technology, and policy ■Lessons Asia can draw from other regions ■Final policy messages
  • 3. e4sv.org SMART VILLAGES SMART CITIES 47% of world’s population and 70% of the world’s poor live in rural villages • Grid connection is not always sustainable for remote communities • Decentralised model can bring advantages • Opportunity/need to combine energy access with holistic development ENERGY AS A CATALYST FOR DEVELOPMENT
  • 4. e4sv.org SMART VILLAGES: SOME KEY FEATURES Key services: education, health , clean water and sanitation  ICT connectivity: distance learning and world’s knowledge base  Modern health services and tele-medicine  Provision of clean water and safe sanitation Foster entrepreneurship in the provision and use of energy services  Capture more of the agricultural value chain  Create new businesses Through ICT connectivity, participate in governance processes  At local, regional and national levels  Smart communities with strong rural/urban linkages Building more resilient communities better able to respond to shocks
  • 5. e4sv.org THE SMART VILLAGES INITIATIVE Focus: sustainable local energy solutions for rural communities Policy advice: an insightful, ‘view from the frontline’ of the challenges of village energy provision for development, and how they can be overcome Engagement: bringing together the key players: scientists, entrepreneurs, villagers, NGO’s, financers, regulators and policy makers etc:  What are the barriers?  How can they be overcome?  What messages to funders and policy makers?
  • 6. e4sv.org SIX REGIONAL ENGAGEMENT PROGRAMMES  East Africa – June 2014  SE Asia – January 2015  South Asia – April 2015  South America – January 2016  West Africa – May 2016  Central America/Caribbean – November 2016 12-18 month engagement programmes:  Workshops → reports/policy briefs  Briefing meetings  Capacity building event  Media workshop  Entrepreneurial competition  Final event pulling together key stakeholders
  • 7. e4sv.org ACTIVITIES ACROSS ASIA ■ Opening workshop – January 2015, Kuching, Malaysia ■ Additional workshops held in Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Thailand, Indonesia, Philippines, Singapore, Korea, Malaysia ■ Addressing disaster resilience, cookstoves, island energy needs, energy- water-sanitation nexus, energy-agriculture nexus, business models, innovative technologies etc. ■ Impact studies in Malaysia with UNIMAS ■ Entrepreneurs scaling-up competition in India ■ Schoolchildren’s poster competition in Pakistan
  • 8. e4sv.org LESSONS FROM OUR WORKSHOPS IN ASIA ON OFF-GRID & CLIMATE-SMART ENERGY ■ Solar home systems ■ Rapidly advancing technology / price drop ■ But need quality assurance ■ Micro-hydro more relevant in parts of Asia than elsewhere, but lacking business models ■ Mini-grids ■ Financing remains a critical issue ■ Some companies are working in this area but patient capital + availability of debt remains problematic – need for public sector commitment and regulatory / policy clarity ■ Local capacity building and community engagement are key ■ Cooking ■ Need to enhance product quality ■ Need more studies of health / environmental impacts ■ Technical / business support ■ Water-food-energy nexus ■ Closely linked but often dealt with via sectoral approaches ■ Smallholder farmers & farming communities in particular ■ Building resilience ■ Unique needs of island / mountain / “most remote” communities
  • 9. e4sv.org INNOVATIVE EXAMPLES FROM ASIA (1) ■ SNV: National Biogas Programme in Vietnam since 2003 ■ 158,500 domestic biogas digesters ■ Access to a clean, renewable and reliable source of energy for more than 790,000 rural individuals across 55 provinces and cities of Vietnam ■ 2,500 new jobs in rural Vietnam ■ Trained nearly 1,700 biogas masons and supported 355 biogas construction team leaders create biogas businesses ■ Provided pre-installation training to 164,525 households. Provided training on post-installation and use of bio-slurry to 161,397 households ■ Reduced around 800,000 tonnes of CO2 equivalent per year ■ Successfully registered with the Voluntary Gold Standard Awarded with 1,290,876 carbon credits under Gold Standard Voluntary Emission Reductions 2013-15 http://www.snv.org/project/vietnam-biogas-programme
  • 10. e4sv.org INNOVATIVE EXAMPLES FROM ASIA (2) ■ IBEKA (The People-Centered Economic and Business Institute), Indonesia – led by Tri Mumpuni and Iskander Kuntoadji ■ Notable for their strong community training/education focus in micro-hydro and engineering ■ IBEKA partners with rural communities to construct micro-hydro plants to produce electricity. ■ IBEKA also trains villagers to operate and maintain these hydro plants. ■ Just one example: the Hydro Empowerment Network offers many more examples across South and Southeast Asia
  • 11. e4sv.org INNOVATIVE EXAMPLES FROM ASIA (3) ■ BOOND, Rajasthan, India: Founder: Rustam Sengupta ■ Micro-utility model with mini-grids; Pay back period 3.5-4 years (US$4.5 million in revenue and produces 8-10 MW per year ■ Impacting more than 100,000 individuals and many small-scale enterprises. ■ People can service their own batteries: training ■ Challenges remain for companies no longer in the start up phase ■ To keep it affordable / profitable, the mini-grid does not power motor-based machinery
  • 12. e4sv.org INNOVATIVE EXAMPLES FROM ASIA (4) ■ Sunlabob, Laos / Hong Kong-based company, led by Andy Schroeter ■ Example of company that meets both on- and off-grid BOP needs – began with off-grid focus in Laos ■ Has installed more than 10,000 systems in over 500 villages and locations in Laos ■ Solar lanterns, solar home systems, solar water pumps, solar water purification, street lights… ■ Also notable for strong local inclusion + hands-on capacity building for long-term sustainability: technical training, accounting & bookkeeping skills to maintain village-run energy micro-enterprises
  • 13. e4sv.org INNOVATIVE EXAMPLES FROM ASIA (5) ■ Thailand: The Integrated ICT and Renewable Energy Project under the Royal Initiative of Her Royal Princess Siridhorn: Pioneer classroom at Learning Center, Village of Khirilom ■ This project focuses on a border area of Thailand / Myanmar ■ This border region includes some of the last villages to receive electrification in Thailand ■ The current project is to electrify 20 villages with the cooperation of the government, researchers, and mobile operators ■ Khirilom is about 2 hours drive from Chumphon ■ This village is powered by a nearby waterfall ■ In addition to electrification, education is central to the project – border guards teach at local schools and computers are powered as well
  • 14. e4sv.org INNOVATIVE EXAMPLES FROM ASIA (6) ■ EcoEnergy, Pakistan: Co-founded by Shazia Khan and Jeremy Higgs ■ Founded in 2010 ■ Collected data for four years in 2,200 villages and 44,000 households prior to launching business ■ Created mapping tool post-survey to show how many hours per day people received electricity, who was off-grid, etc. ■ Pioneered PAYG for Pakistan: now a 95% repayment rate ■ Can help unbanked customers develop credit rating ■ Shifted business model from solar lanterns to solar home systems, with strong focus on small businesses ■ Shifted to a social enterprise model and are fundraising to meet goal of serving 50,000 customers over the next 3 years ■ Banks – risk averse
  • 15. e4sv.org LESSONS FROM OTHER GLOBAL REGIONS ■ East Africa: The strength of the PAYG model for solar home systems or pico solar, use of mobile money, and relative openness to market-driven solutions compared to many other regions ■ West Africa: Productive uses of energy, especially in the agricultural sector (ex.: Bonergie adding value to papaya); this also cuts across all the other regions ■ Latin America: Most have access…but remote communities (e.g., Amazon, Haiti) are still left behind. Government leadership crucial but market-driven solutions also possible ■ Cross-cutting issue: Resilience – clearly reflected in island contexts, such as the Caribbean, but also in Ecuador (earthquake), parts of East and West Africa (drought), etc.
  • 16. e4sv.org SOME KEY CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS ■ Decentralised approach can viable alternative to grid connection, not just an interim measure ■ Decentralised approach can bring unique benefits (resilience) ■ Supportive policy & regulatory frameworks and political commitment ■ An integrated approach ■ Community engagement & leadership ■ Complementary interventions ■ Taking gender into account
  • 17. e4sv.org SOME KEY CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS (2) ■ Access to finance & support to entrepreneurs ■ Increasing awareness ■ Sharing experiences domestically and internationally ■ Capacity building ■ Moving from charity to markets ■ Acknowledge that market-based solutions won’t work for certain “most-remote” communities
  • 18. e4sv.org Thank you for your attention www.e4sv.org | info@e4sv.org | @e4SmartVillages