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Learn about the GVEP approach to improving access to energy for the poor, with a focus on clean, multi-use, multi-stakeholder, and market-driven solutions. Explore the progress made in Africa and other regions, and discover how GVEP is working to strengthen partnerships and create regional hubs for sustainable energy solutions.
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Harnessing Energy for Poverty Reduction www.gvep.org Energy Partnerships CSD 14 Partnerships in Practice Interactive Discussion Session Improving access to energy for the poor: benefits of partnering
The GVEP Approach • Technology neutral (clean sources to the extent possible) • Multi-application: electricity, heating, cooking, lighting, cooling, transport, etc. (i.e. not just power) • Multi-use: Emphasis on productive use & livelihoods; also education, health & social • Multi-stakeholder: private, public, NGO • Multi-sector: energy, agric, water, health, education, SMEs, etc • Market principles • Its diversity creates for GVEP the opportunity to occupy a strong advocacy position in the development community able to ensure small voices are heard and that small talk can become big talk.
Progress made • GVEP has made some important progress towards these goals • Over the past 3 years, GVEP has focused on providing technical assistance and funding from donor partners to enable developing country partners to undertake two types of country actions: • Development of action plans with projects/programmes to address the energy needs of key sectors identified in national poverty reduction strategies; and • Carrying out the necessary studies and project development activity in order to reorient major national energy programmes towards more productive uses and livelihoods transforming activities.
Progress made Africa Country-level • Cameroon: support to development of the National Energy Action Plan (NEAP) • Ghana: the preparation of the Energy for Poverty Reduction Action Plan – action plan to be launched on June 15th. Regional: • West Africa: support for the development of a White Paper on energy for poverty reduction agreed by Energy Ministers of the Economic Community of West Africa States (ECOWAS). • East Africa: developing country action plans – looking to scale up
Progress made • Brazil: links were made between the Light for All Programme (“Luz para Todos”– LpT), the national poverty and hunger reduction strategy and a number of national initiatives. The Integrated Actions Work Plan under LpTis now a component of Brazil’s poverty reduction strategy. • Guatemala: a GVEP action plan was produced and GVEP is working with REEEP
GVEP – moving on to the next phase • building further on an already strong relationship with donor, NGO and developing country government partners • extending the current focus to reinforce the “village” component of GVEP by mobilising, supporting and adding to the smaller, in-country partners and implementers (non-profit and for profit) which form the backbone of the Partnership, and providing them with a range of appropriate resources.
2006 - 2009 • Work in focus countries to create future regional hubs • develop and roll-out a new range of tools to initiate, reinforce and develop local energy access supply chains • Feed back through an improved knowledge base information on the most effective energy access organisational and product innovations and cross-fertilise this information with national action planning and project identification Making Village Issues Global Issues