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Danish Development Cooperation

Danish Development Cooperation. Vivi Yieng-Kow Danish Environmental Protection Agency Workshop on Methodologies for Technology Needs Assessments 23 –25 April 2002, KEMCO, Yongin, Republic of Korea. Overview. Danish Development Cooperation Activities in Danish Cooperation

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Danish Development Cooperation

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  1. Danish Development Cooperation Vivi Yieng-Kow Danish Environmental Protection Agency Workshop on Methodologies for Technology Needs Assessments 23 –25 April 2002, KEMCO, Yongin, Republic of Korea

  2. Overview • Danish Development Cooperation • Activities in Danish Cooperation • Energy in bilateral Cooperation – some examples • Energy in multilateral Cooperation – some examples • Energy under MIFRESTA – some examples • Lessons Learned

  3. Danish Development Cooperation • Poverty reduction through sustainable development. • Provided as: • Bilateral cooperation • 15 programme partner countries (low income countries) • Private Sector Programme • Mixed Credit Facility • NGOs • Multilateral cooperation - UN organisations, the • Development banks and GEF for instance. • MIFRESTA - environment, natural disasters and peace. • Low and middle income + economies in transition. • UNEP/Risø activities

  4. Activities in Danish Cooperation • Partner countries’ needs and priorities (PRSP) • Low-income countries • broad-based enabling frameworks • Middle-income countries • specific gaps • Capacity development and technology transfer • Assessment of alternative technological options required. • RET and EE on supply and demand side.

  5. Energy in bilateral cooperation – some examples Nepal In 1999 a 5 year programme (about USD 20M) • Improved cooking stoves. – 15.000 have been realised to date • Electricity from micro-hydropower plants – 300 kW are installed to date • Solar energy to households – about 8.000 installations have been realised to date

  6. Energy in bilateral cooperation – some examples Burkina Faso On the 2nd 5-year programme (about USD 40M) • Institutional strengthening – frameworks • Traditional energy • RET and EE (industry + household/public sector + norms for buildings) • Rural electrification – demonstration projects

  7. Energy in bilateral cooperation – some examples Niger and Ghana Traditional energy and RET • Preparation of energy sector programme in Ghana (about USD 30M) • Rural electrification • Traditional + RET Egypt • Programme on RET and EE on demand and supply side (USD 20M)

  8. Energy in bilateral cooperation – some examples Mozambique Initiated in 2002 (about USD 60M). Sofola chosen. • End-users’ identified needs for energy services • Network-building. Public – private partnerships • Institutional strengthening at local level • Identified needs for CB of stakeholders involved

  9. Energy in bilateral cooperation – some examples • Earmarked funds for RET and EE development to WB and ADB • Affrei – demonstration programme - “next generation” of energy projects from government-led to private-led rural electrification/ transformation - cross-sectoral approach • UNEP/Risø and CTI • Promote sustainable energy solutions

  10. Energy under MIFRESTA – some examples • Projects on - RET (wind and solar) - EE (building sector in South Africa) - Institutional strengthening – planning, frameworks in a number of African and Asian Countries • Projects in economies in transition - Improved heating systems - District heating

  11. Lessons Learned • Organisational set-up is the single most important thing • Top down vs Buttom up. • Demonstration projects – scaling up to make a difference • Private sector involvement in all seizes

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