Unlocking climate finance for decentralised energy access

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Unlocking climate finance for decentralised energy access IIED and HIVOS Working Paper, June 2016

Transcript of Unlocking climate finance for decentralised energy access

Page 1: Unlocking climate finance for decentralised energy access

Unlocking climate finance for decentralised energy accessIIED and HIVOS Working Paper, June 2016

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Note: Climate finance figures are based analysis of the Climate Funds Update (CFU) database, which covers public finance for all major international climate funds

Climate finance allocation for energy

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Decentralised energy access: finance needs vs allocation

The estimate of USD 23 billion is from World Energy Outlook, IEA 2011

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INVESTMENT NEEDS (USD BILLION/YEAR)

Total needs 48

Current (in 2009) 9.1

Business-as-usual projections 14

Additional financing needed 34

Electricity

On-grid 11

Mini-grid 12.2

Off-grid 7.4

Cooking

LPG 0.9

Biogas systems 1.8

Advanced biomass cookstoves 0.8

Total additional financing needed for decentralised energy (electricity and cooking)

23

Additional financing needs for grid-based and decentralised energy

Source: IEA 2011

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Who needs finance and for what?

• Energy userse.g. to pay for products, equipment, maintenance

• Energy providerse.g. R&D, feasibility analysis, piloting, buying inventory, business growth

• Financial institutionse.g. concessional finance to channel to providers, risk guarantees

• Governmentse.g. policy, regulatory and market development, capacity-building

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Status of climate finance (CFU database): Of 35.3 bn USD bn pledged, 14.1 bn has been approved

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Mitigation: focus on middle income countries via loans

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Clean Technology Fund channels largest share of mitigation finance

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Status of 5.6 bn climate finance allocated to energy…

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40% of climate finance flowing toward energy projects

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Distribution of energy finance: preference for loans to utility-scale projects in middle-income countries

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Utility-scale solar, wind & geothermal receive largest share

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Distribution of grid-based and decentralised energy supply projects in low-income countries

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Key barriers to flow of international public climate finance to decentralised energy access

General barriers

• High risks (perceived, actual)

• Investor returns and short-termism

• Investment size and transaction costs

• Policy and regulatory environment

• Shortage of business models or quality plans

Climate finance barriers

Preference for loans versus grants

Approaches of financial intermediaries

Priorities of funds’ results frameworks

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Innovation on the ground: lessons from Bangladesh and Nepal

• High-level policy enablers

• Special agencies to aggregate and channel funds to small-scale (eg IDCOL, AEPC)

• Holistic, market-building approach

• Mix of financing instruments for users, providers & financial intermediaries

• Regulatory push by central banks

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Recommendations

1. Improve targeting of Climate Funds to decentralised energy access in low-income countries

• Map funding priorities versus needs

• Earmark funds for decentralised energy

• Adjust design features – investment criteria, risk appetite, results framework

• Get the right balance of loan and grant funding

• Channel finance through entities with capacity to fund small-scale eg special agencies

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Recommendations

2. Strengthen national enabling environment

• Use climate finance to support policy and regulatory reforms

• Strengthen institutions for managing climate finance in low-income countries

3. Fill knowledge gaps

• Research and communication for stakeholders to understand finance gaps, needs and sources

• Lesson-sharing between countries on innovative mechanisms and enablers

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Neha Rai, [email protected]

Sarah Best, IIED [email protected]

Eco Matser, Hivos [email protected]

Contacts

References

Rai, N, Best, S and Soanes, M (2016) Unlocking climate finance for decentralised energy access. IIED, London.http://pubs.iied.org/16621IIED.html?c=energy