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Improved energy sector planning to respond to climate change. Rohit Khanna ESMAP Program Manager. How to convert global scenarios to national actions. Consensus building. A complex process Principal stakeholders involved in India’s low carbon planning. Multiple tools required. Multi-region
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Improved energy sector planning to respond to climate change Rohit Khanna ESMAP Program Manager
Consensus building • A complex process • Principal stakeholders involved in India’s low carbon planning
Multiple tools required • Multi-region • CGE • Dynamic • Stochastic • GE Questions: Abatement opportunities Technologies/investments Marginal abatement cost EFFECT TAMT MACtool LULUCF Questions: Impact on economic growth, employment, trade, production choices, etc. Bottom-up vs. Top-down
Establish a macroeconomic outlook • Build a picture of the sector • Develop a forecast • Establish alternative development scenarios • Identify financing needs and options EFFECT Model for Planning and Consensus Building
MAC Tool Graphs : Wedges, Installed Power Capacity, Investments
Case study: Mexico • Context: Government had previously established a national climate change strategy; were in the process of preparing an Action Plan for specific sectoral LCD interventions (PECC) • Methodology: WB was asked to contribute to PECC by looking at economic cost and investment requirements of alternative LCD scenarios • Conclusions: A number of high potential and low cost measures: public transport and vehicle efficiency, efficiency measures and low-cost electricity supply options – but barriers prevent implementation • Impacts: • $500 million Climate Change DPL, April 2008 • $300 million Environmental sustainability DPL, Dec. 2008 • $1.5 billion Green Growth DPL, Oct. 2009 • $400 million Low Carbon Growth DPL, Nov. 2010 • 2 RE / EE SILS + 2 CIF operations
Case study: Poland • Context: Government concerns over cost of climate change mitigation • Methodology: • undertook a bottom-up study with addition of a linked macroeconomic analysis to address economic growth and fiscal concerns • drawing on best practices in other EU countries was particularly helpful • Conclusions: good policies could make a big difference by focusing on energy efficiency and low cost renewable energy to 2020 – other options not feasible in this time period • Impact: $1.1 billion RE / EE DPL approved June 2011
Lessons and experience • Low carbon planning is a gradual process built on long-term relationships • Small investments in tools and planning can have a big payback in terms of scaling up deployment • Avoid reinventing the wheel - make use of existing models and tools • Be bold, but don’t underestimate the challenge of turning plans into investments and policy change • The need to tailoranalysis to the country’s needs – sub-sectoral work can be equally valuable
Future priorities • Coordinate low carbon planning activities to maximize learning and share tools • Need to focus on operationalizing plans to prepare investments for climate funds (CIFs, Energy+) • Improve understanding of climate resilience – and implications for investments