1 / 22

Key policy considerations for low carbon technology transfer Dr David Ockwell 14 th June 2007

Key policy considerations for low carbon technology transfer Dr David Ockwell 14 th June 2007 d.g.ockwell@sussex.ac.uk. Overview. Background & rationale Methods & approach Key considerations for low carbon technology transfer Future research. Background & rationale.

avent
Download Presentation

Key policy considerations for low carbon technology transfer Dr David Ockwell 14 th June 2007

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. Key policy considerations for low carbon technology transfer • Dr David Ockwell • 14th June 2007 • d.g.ockwell@sussex.ac.uk

  2. Overview • Background & rationale • Methods & approach • Key considerations for low carbon technology transfer • Future research

  3. Background & rationale • Future emissions from rapid economic development • Emissions increases 1990-2001: • India 61% • China 111% • China to overtake US by 2010 • India to equal China by 2030 (EIA 2004)

  4. Background & rationale • Radical vs. incremental improvements • E.g. increase average efficiency of coal fired power stations from 33% to 45% between now and 2030 = annual reductions of: China: 872 million tonnes of CO2 per year India: 238 million tonnes of CO2 per year UK economy wide emissions in 2006: 561 million t CO2 Estimates based on IEA (2006) forecasts

  5. UK-India Collaborative Study • Background: • G8 Gleneagles 2005: Developing countries pressed for new approach to international cooperation on clean energy technologies • UK Government and the Government of India decide to collaborate on study to assess barriers to transfer of low carbon energy technology between developed and developing countries

  6. UK-India Collaborative Study • Aim: • Identify barriers to successful technology transfer • Identify key policy considerations for overcoming barriers

  7. Study approach • Literature review • Five technology case studies • Coal gasification including IGCC • LED lighting • Biomass • Hybrid vehicles • Improving combustion efficiency • Analysis and recommendations

  8. Key considerations • No “one policy fits all” solution • Stage of technology development

  9. Stage of technology development

  10. Key considerations • No “one policy fits all” solution • Stage of technology development • Technological change and capacity building • Centrality of knowledge flows

  11. Essential knowledge flows Technology suppliers Technology transferred Technology importers New production capacity Supplier firms’ engineering, managerial and other technological capabilities Flow A Capital goods, services & designs Skills & know-how for operation & maintenance Flow B Knowledge & expertise behind technology Accumulation of technological capacity Flow C Based on Bell (1990)

  12. Key considerations • No “one policy fits all” solution • Stage of technology development • Technological change and capacity building • Centrality of knowledge flows • Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) • “Necessary but not sufficient” • Absorptive capacity

  13. Key considerations • No “one policy fits all” solution • Stage of technology development • Technological change and capacity building • Centrality of knowledge flows • Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) • “Necessary but not sufficient” • Absorptive capacity • National policy environment • International policy environment

  14. Future research • Taxonomy of barriers to technology transfer • Intellectual Property Rights (IPRs) • Mechanisms to facilitate joint R&D

  15. Taxonomy of barriers to technology transfer • Practical framework for policy makers • Generalisations on likely barriers and policy implications • Stage of technology development? • Nature of technology?

  16. Intellectual Property Rights (IPRs) • Necessary but not sufficient? • Energy technologies, not necessarily low carbon • Technologies where IPRs prohibitive • Technologies where IPRs not an issue • Comparisons with other sectors e.g. pharmaceuticals • Possible contributing factors to IPR related barriers: • parties involved in negotiations • how the issues were pitched • domestic policy environments in host countries • different commercial interests in industrialised countries • Potential for joint R&D

  17. Mechanisms to facilitate joint R&D • Specific mechanisms for facilitating joint RDD&D between developed & developing countries, including private sector involvement • Assessment criteria for analysing likely success of different mechanisms • Analyse existing initiatives e.g. IEA implementing agreements, Asia-Pacific Partnership • Analyse existing technological capacities in low carbon technologies amongst Indian firms -> recommendations on which technologies have highest potential to benefit

  18. Summary • Background & rationale • Methods & approach • Key considerations for low carbon technology transfer • Future research

  19. Conclusion • Key considerations need to guide policy development • No “one policy fits all” solution • Further empirical research required to inform effective policy actions • Tension between urgency and need for long term effectiveness

More Related