The International Climate Initiative of the BMUB

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1 The International Climate Initiative of the BMUB Bringing Renewable Energy to the Heart of Climate Policy Harald Neitzel Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Building and Nuclear Safety (BMUB) Division KI II 3 "International Affairs Environment and Energy, Environment and Building and Urban Planning, OECD and Cooperation with Industrialised Countries"; Koethener Str. 2-3; Berlin; Tel ; Fax ; harald.neitzel@bmub.bund.de Seite 1

2 International Climate Initiative (IKI) Federal budget Projects in developing countries, emerging economies and countries in transition: mitigation, REDD+, adaptation, biodiversity IKI UNFCCC CBD Demonstration of solutions Input for negotiations in the fields of climate change and biodiversity International Climate Initiative Seite 2

3 Climate and biodiversity finance through the IKI until July 2015: Initiation of 456 projects in 134 partner countries with total BMUB funding of 1.4 * billion 65 additional project ideas were chosen in 2014 and have been asked to submit a full porposal Mobilising of additional funding (implementing agencies + other public and private-sector sources): 2.5 billion Approx. 3.9 billion total volume of IKI funding *) including funds from DKTI, NAMA facility as well as in-payments for multilateral funds International Climate Initiative Seite 3

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5 Sustainable energy supply, renewable energy and energy efficiency by region By number of projects* MENA 13% Middle and Eastern Europe, Central Asia, Turkey 15% Asia 38% Midle and South America 25% Africa 9% * Includes bilateral, regional, and global projects. Excludes F-gas projects with EE or RE components Seite 5

6 Thematic focus areas of country matrix Energy * Projects not clearly attributed to one technology or mitigation approach Methodological project categories are mainly policy advice, capacity building, and innovative finance instruments RE 18% EE & RE 15% Wind 5% CHP 3% CSP 5% PV 11% Biomass 9% Projects clearly attributed to one technology or mitigation approach Methodological project categories are mainly technology transfer and investments EE 28% Buildings 6% * By number of projects Seite 6

7 IKI-Goals for Renewable Energy: Assessment of technical and economic potential Policy consulting for the expansion of renewable energies Capacity building for institutions and relevant actors, e.g. through RENAC Identification and removal of barriers to investments and mobilisation of private investments Technology transfer and support for pilot projects Creation of both: GHG mitigation opportunities and markets for RE (solar, wind, biomass from organic waste) Seite 7

8 BMUB presents 19 Fact Sheets on RE-Issues from IKI Projects at the German SAIREC Stand Präsentation 2015 Seite 8

9 Transregional Workshop on Solar Power Plants Kick-off for a long-term global exchange platform, Cape Town, 4 October 2015 Establishment of a platform on solar power plants an outreach component of RE prects within the IKI portfolio Goal: linking partner countries experience with IKI founded CSP and VLSP projects and foster a political dialogue on solar energy deployment, planing and funding Target group: IKI partner countries and countries with developed solar energy markets First Kick-off workshop was held during SAIREC with focus on current challenges on solar energy market and grid integration Particpiant from eight countries shared experience on short and longterm strategies on RE-integration as well as legal models and market integration 17/10/2015 Results and follow-up company presentation 2012 Seite 9

10 Lessons learnt (1): In many partner countries, ambitious RE/EE targets and support mechanisms exist. Improvements of data through national, regional and local estimations of potential often first step, followed by employment of technology, which either is not available in country (Technolgytransfer) or is not ready for market (see Chile). Demonstration projects can initiate political dialogues, yet they must not only be profitable & coherent from a political & developmental perspective, but also visible (see Brasil). Besides demonstration projects, innovative finance instruments can enable a path for a transformative policy dialogue (see Mexico, Turkey, Jordan). Seite 10

11 Lessons learnt (2): EE in the building sector offers large potentials which could be utilised more effectively in the future. The topic of EE as a business model plays a significant role. The design of finance instruments must consider the issue of life-cycles and life duration of RE technologies in detail. Partner countries regard quantiative information about co-benefits in addition to GHG emissions reductions as necessary Global exchange of project results and best practices to be improved ( Outreach ). Seite 11

12 Thank you for your attention Further Information: