1 / 6

Universal Energy Access by 2030

SUSTAINABLE ENERGY FOR ALL INITIATIVE. Universal Energy Access by 2030. Task Force 1 Draft Report, January 2012. Implementation Framework. Pathways (Interrelated) country actions led by host governments country-level actions by the commercial/ private sector

shyla
Télécharger la présentation

Universal Energy Access by 2030

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. SUSTAINABLE ENERGY FOR ALL INITIATIVE Universal Energy Access by 2030 Task Force 1 Draft Report, January 2012

  2. Implementation Framework Pathways (Interrelated) country actions led by host governments country-level actions by the commercial/ private sector country-level actions led by civil society organizations using multiple innovative bottom‑up approaches Energy Interventions access to electricity access to clean cooking and heating productive uses of energy – cross-cutting, paying special attention to income generation activities in local industry and agriculture

  3. Types of country-level assistance • Opt-in Program that offers technical assistance to all the countries that are willing to participate in this initiative • Accelerated Program package for countries with the largest populations without access and where intervention could lead to rapid scale-up and high impact • Targeted Assistance Program to the countries that have already made substantial progress and could potentially reach universal access with specific, well-defined inputs

  4. Actions by multiple stakeholders including private sector and civil society Source: Carlos Pascual, US State Department

  5. Institutional Architecture • Overall coordinating mechanism, global level • coordinate financial and • information flows • facilitate knowledge exchange • and cross‑fertilization of ideas • and best practice • maintain global monitoring system • to keep track of progress • regarding program milestones • Universal Access Facility/Fund • support the technical assistance programs for the ‘opt-in’ countries • support analytical work for effective implementation • Strategic • Advisory • and Coordination Group • Country/regional level institutional structures (existing or new) • help in designing and implementing energy access • action programs that contribute to the achievement of • the targets • coordinate action at national and sub-national/local levels, • as necessary

  6. Next Steps … up to Rio+20 • Improving attractiveness of the program • “Offer” (for public sector) • ‘Value proposition’ (for private sector and civil society) • Specific strategies/packages • Improving program design for action agenda • Milestones (analytical work) • Institutional mechanisms (specific proposals & TORs) • Technical assistance programs (financial requirements) … post Rio+20 Securing buy-in and commitments • Consultations with country governments and other stakeholders • Regional launches, etc Ramping up implementation • Stock-taking (inventory of energy access programs and the resources) • Deepening analytical work, M&E, etc

More Related