Clean energy initiative for poor proposed


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Energy+ is Norway's plan to scale renewable energy in developing nations, mobilizing climate finance and private investors for solar, wind, and hydro projects to cut emissions, expand energy access, and drive low carbon growth.

 

Essential Takeaways

Energy+ is a Norway-led plan funding low carbon power in developing nations via climate finance and private investment.

  • Targets solar, wind, and hydro projects in developing nations.
  • Mobilizes climate finance and private capital at scale.
  • Aims to cut emissions and expand modern energy access.
  • Builds on Norway's rainforest funding model.
  • Seeks billions from donors and institutional investors.

 

Norway wants to channel billions of dollars to renewable energies in developing nations, building on a scheme to protect tropical forests to which Oslo has been the biggest donor, officials said.

 

With cash to spare as the world's number six oil exporter, Norway, with offshore rigs spread across the North Sea, wants governments and private investors to join a plan it calls Energy+ to promote green energies such as solar or wind power to combat climate change.

"Energy+ is an initiative to promote access to energy and low-carbon development" in developing nations, and reflects new trends in Norwegian renewable energy, according to an internal document from the Ministry of International Development obtained by Reuters.

Developed countries promised in 2009 to raise climate aid to $100 billion a year from 2020, to help developing nations curb emissions of greenhouse gases, even as the IEA says G20 renewable aid is not enough to meet goals, and adapt to impacts such as floods, droughts, heatwaves and rising seas.

Few rich countries have outlined plans for how they will increase aid until 2020 as budget cuts bite in many nations and, with reducing carbon emissions in Europe proving difficult, shorter-term domestic worries about jobs and mounting state debt eclipse concerns about global warming.

"We are trying to see if we can learn from rainforest conservation to set up a similar international scheme for environmentally friendly energy," Environment and International Development Minister Erik Solheim told Reuters.

In 2007, Norway promised 3 billion crowns US $537.3 million a year to help developing nations slow deforestation, including projects worth $1 billion each for Brazil and Indonesia — making the country a leader in such funding.

Trees soak up carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas, as they grow and release it when they burn or rot. Indonesia recently imposed a two-year moratorium on forest clearance as part of the scheme — some environmentalists said the Indonesian plan was not ambitious enough.

"The one big difference from rainforests is that the private sector will have to be involved in a much larger way," Solheim said.

He said that the Energy+ project would seek billions of dollars from all donors. Asked if Norway's investments would match or exceed spending on forests protection, he said: "I hope so in the long run."

He said it would have to include "a huge private component involving Norwegian hydro-electric companies and stock exchange investors like banks and funds investing in hydro, solar, wind, etc in developing nations."

"This is a very good idea — the approach to renewable energy is too fractured," said Arild Skedsmo, head of climate and energy at the WWF conservation group in Norway.

The ministry document says that global development aid to energy projects now totals about $7 billion a year, underscoring that clean energy depends on wider economic growth to accelerate. Norway doubled support for clean energy to 1.6 billion crowns US $286.6 million in 2011 from 800 million in 2010.

The ministry in April alluded to the clean energy plan in a single, little-noticed sentence in a 76-page document, even as Canada falls behind in the clean-tech race according to recent reports, about sustainable growth. Solheim said it was too early to say when the Energy+ project would be formally launched.

Norway welcomed Indonesia's decision to suspend new permits for logging on 64 million hectares 158.1 million acres of land as an "important step forward."

 

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