3. Efficiency Cooperation: an
Autonomous Entity
Members account for over 75% of world GDP and energy
EU
use.
Germany
United
Kingdom
France
Italy
Russia
Canada
USA
Mexico
Japan
Republic of
Korea
China
India
Brazil
Australia
IPEEC was established in 2009 at the G8 summit in
Italy;Secretariatis located in Paris, France
Facilitates Implementation of Energy Efficiency
Improvement
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4. IPEEC: a High-level
International Forum
Provides global leadership on energy efficiency by identifying
and facilitating government implementation of policies and
programs that yield high energy efficiency gains.
Promotes information exchange on best practices
and facilitates initiatives to improve energy efficiency.
Reports to G20 Summit, Clean Energy Ministerial and others.
Partners with industry to promote rapid deployment of energy
efficient technology.
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7. and Services
FollowParallelJourneys
Basic research
Applied research
Individual innovators
Demonstration
& sample distribution
General regulation
Early demonstration
Full demonstration
Marketed product
Warranted product
Small group: start-up/
unit in a company
Medium-size operation
Large scale operation
Early adopters & niches
Rational economic purchase
Technology
& market evaluation
General regulation
Specific regulation
General regulation
General regulation
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8. Barriers to Energy Efficiency
Barrier
Examples
Market
Market organisation and price distortions prevent customers from appraising
the true value of energy efficiency.
The principal agent problem, in which the investor does not reap the rewards
of improved efficiency (the classic case being the landlord-tenant situation).
Transaction costs (project costs are high relative to energy savings).
Financial
Up-front costs and dispersed benefits discourage investors
Perception of EE investments as complicated& risky - high transaction costs
Lack of awareness of financial benefits on the part of financial institutions.
Information and
awareness
Lack of sufficient information and understanding, on the part of consumers,
to make rational consumption and investment decisions.
Regulatory and
institutional
Energy tariffs that discourage EE investment (such as declining block prices
and fuel subsidies).
Incentive structures encourage energy providers to sell energy rather than
invest in cost-effective energy efficiency.
Institutional bias towards supply-side investments.
Technical
Lack of affordable energy efficiency technologies suitable to local conditions.
Insufficient local capacities to identify,develop, implement and maintain
energy efficiency investments.
9. Energy Efficiency
Financing Trends
Global “clean” energy - total deal value & percentage
share by sector (deal numbers shown in parenthesis)
www.cleanenergypipeline.com
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10. IPEEC‟s Sustainable Buildings and
Communities Initiatives
Capture the global energy savings potential in the building &
communities sectors by:
1. Identifying & filling information gaps;
2. Disseminating information on building EE through
web platform and capacity building events;
3. Publishing “policy pathways” to ensure effective
implementations of buildings EE policies;
4. Developing peer-to-peer training toolkits;
5. Enhancing collaboration between existing actors &
networks in developing and developed countries.
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11. Building Energy Efficiency
Task
Conceptual Framework
„Design, build, and operate‟ Model – uses the building life cycle.
Analyze the various implementation mechanisms and
assess the impacts of rating tools & programs.
Expected Outcomes
Increase multilateral cooperation in the field of building EE
rating.
Facilitate deployment of effective EE rating tools & programs.
Enable greater sharing of the building design, construction &
performance data that are both inputs to & outputs of rating
tools.
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12. Co-Benefits of Improved
Energy Efficiency
Reduced emissions
Reduced energy
infrastructure costs
Fewer energy
subsidies
Higher property
values
Reduced
unwanted
mobility
Improved human
health
Local
employment
Improved
community
appearance
Local spending
and more…
13. Moving Forward
Governments need to commit and also provide the following:
Overarching policy framework combining mandatory and voluntary
policies and strengthening enforcement.
Remove barriers that distort markets such as energy subsidies.
Promote an integrated “systems approach” instead of a sector
approach (such as the “smart cities”).
And Business needs to:
Move towards an integrated value chain approach where suppliers
extend their service portfolio to offer complete solutions (auditing,
installation, maintenance and financing solutions).
Develop innovative financing vehicles for EE projects by
collaborating with financial institutions & developing expertise in EE
project financing.
Behavioral change is a key driver of EE improvement.
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14. IPEEC Task Groups:
Integrated Approach to EE
Policy Making/Capacity Building
EMAK - energy
management
WEACT – capacity
building, training
IPEEI indicators
GSEP – energy
performance
AEEFM – finance
Finance
Commercial/ Residential Sector
Industrial Sector
PEPDEE - utilities
SEAD - appliances
EMAK – energy management
SBN - buildings
GSEP – energy performance
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16. City Implementation Tool for
Environmental Actions (CITEA)
Activity Forecast Module
- Macroeconomic Variables
- Saturation, Floor-space,
- End-use & Technology Mix
Energy & Water Intensity
Module
Surveys & other data
sources
Stock
Accountin
g Module
- Building
Shell
Equipment
Lifetime
Policy Module
- Measures & Best Practices
- Technology-cost Matrix
Actions
City Energy &
Water Use
Savings
Potential
LBNL presentation at the IPEEC-WEACT Jakarta Workshop, October, 2011
17. Sustainable Urban Energy
Planning (SUEP)
Help 3 pilot cities in South-East Asia (Danang,
Cebu, Surabaya) formulate long term
sustainable urban energy development
strategies
Collect Information
on:
• City Energy
Balance,
• City GHG
Emissions,
• Municipal EE
Opportunities,
• Institutional &
Output
•Review of Existing
Energy Initiatives,
• City Energy &
Emissions Profile,
• City Government
Energy Spending,
•Sector
Recommendations,
• EE Action Plan.
World Bank presentation at the IPEEC-WEACT Jakarta Workshop, October, 2011
18. Zero Energy-Housing
(ZEH): 10 Key Issues
1. Localized Building
Approaches,
6. Policy Frameworks,
7. Adequate Housing,
2. Financial Mobilization, 8. Infrastructure
3. Building Performance
Integration,
Assurance,
9. Facilitating
4. Consumer Education,
5. Training & Capacity
Building,
Procurement,
10.Recognizing Success.
Innovolve presentation at the IPEEC-WEACT New-Delhi Workshop, December, 2011
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20. Energy Conservation
Building Code (ECBC)
Developed by the Bureau
The ECBC covers:
The Building Envelope,
The Lighting System,
The HVAC System,
Solar Hot Water Heating,
The Electrical System.
of Energy Efficiency
(BEE),
Introduced in May 2007,
Targets new commercial
buildings with connected
load of 100 KW or 120
kVA in the five climatic
zones of the country.
Incremental cost: + 15%
Payback period < 5 years
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23. for Integrated Habitat
Assessment)
•Guidelines for design, construction & operation,
• Performances benchmarks for energy & water use,
• Integration of relevant Indian codes and standards,
• In alignment with government policies & programs,
• ECBC +.
RESULTS:
Energy Savings
Compared to
Benchmarks
Water Consumption
Reduction Compared to
Conventional Buildings
Center for
Environmental Science
and Engineering,
Kanpur
43%
50%
Police Training School,
Maharashtra
31%
52%
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24. Some of our Partners
International Organizations
National Entities
Private Entities / NGOs
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EE improvement is often hampered by market, financial, information, institutional, and technical barriers. According to survey and interviews, while consumer awareness and low energy prices are two major barriers to EE commonly mentioned worldwide, the lack of affordable financing and the perceived riskiness of EE ranked especially high in the EBRD region.EE policy doesn’t deliverEE savings exist, but in small pockets trapped beneath the these barriers rather than beneath the earth’s surface.
Finally, it is important to remember that energy efficiency policies will deliver co-benefits. Low income energy efficiency programmes include measures to:improve the quality of the building shell of a home; improve efficiency of energy-using equipmentThese measures have proved effective in:Reducing energy bills by 25-30 percentAs insurance against fuel price increasesADDITIONAL co-benefits, for household itself, for broader society, and for utilities and the government, include:Quality of life improvements for participantsHealth benefits and greater productivity for participantsLower fuel assistance paymentsProperty value increases from rehabilitationJobs creationSocietal benefits etc…These co-benefits are important to consider for very practical reasons and cost effectiveness is one critical benefit: In Summary, delivering energy services to all of our citizens and in a manner that is environmentally sustainable is critical. Many policy measures will be necessary, but the first and most cost effective will be energy efficiency.