Title: A project of
1- A project of
- Earthlife Africa Johannesburg
- participant in the Energy Caucus
2March 2005
- Energy Caucus Presentation to PPC
- Creating Employment
- Reducing Poverty
- Respect for Future Generations
3Four areas of project activityto promote
sustainable energy andaddress climate change
- Advocacy and building awareness and capacity
- Research and information dissemination
- South-North-South networking and collaboration
- Supporting the South African Climate Action
Network (SACAN).
4Advocacy and raising awareness
- Advocating social and environmental justice in
the energy sector and in addressing global
climate change, including - Input to government processes e.g. Integrated
Energy - Planning (IEP) Renewable Energy
Efficiency Strategies - Participation in stakeholder fora, e.g. DME
workshops NCCC - Supporting civil society initiatives, e.g. Energy
Caucus CURES - Community outreach and capacity building
- Lobbying of decision-makers.
5Information development dissemination
- Producing and distributing information and
advocacy materials, including - Sustainable Energy Briefings
- E-mail newsletters SENSE (monthly) CCEN
(bi-monthly) - Climate Action News (Quarterly)
- Flyers, fact-sheets, posters, information
booklets, incl - Getting to Grips with Global Climate
Governance - Getting to Grips with Sustainable Energy
- www.earthlife.org.za
6Research
- Commissioning independent research, for a
knowledge base focused on public benefits and
longer term - Green Power, public benefits and electricity
sector restructuring (2001) - Energy Sustainability Indicators for South
Africa (May 2002) - Policies and Measures for Renewable Energy and
Energy Efficiency - (EDRC with ERI, UCT, April 2003)
- Employment Potential of Renewable Energy in
South Africa (AGAMA Energy, November 2003) - The Potential of Renewable Energy in South
Africa long-term, to 2050 - due April 2005 (RAPs Consulting)
7South-North-South networking collaboration
- Information exchange, civil society collaboration
and developing solidarity with organisations in
the South, as well as the North, including
participation in the global Climate Action
Network (CAN), Friends of the Earth
International, Citizens United for Renewable
Energy and Sustainability (CURES), INFORSE,
Climate Justice etc. - Study Tour South Africans to Denmark, incl. DME
officials and a parliamentarian (May 2003) - WSSD Civil society position papers (first Energy
Caucus) and liaison with big NGOs - Bonn Renewables 2004 follow-up
8South Africa Climate Action Network (SACAN)
- Initial funding to support meetings of SACAN
- Production of information materials, including S
A Climate Action News (distributed with
groundWork newsletter) - Providing secretariat services to the network
- Co-ordination NGO CBO interaction with
government national processes - Co-ordinating participation in CAN and
international initiatives such as CDMWatch and
Climate Equity debate.
9Why a South African civil society Energy
Caucus?- To provide a common platform to
advocate a just transition to sustainable energy
- What is sustainable energy?
- Why do we need to change from business-as-usual
(BAU)? - What are the elements and parameters of a just
transition? - What are the costs and who should pay them?
- What is possible or realistic and what are the
factors that determine what is possible? - How does South Africa initiate a just transition?
10Nkosanas input
11Why a South African civil society Energy
Caucus?- To provide a common platform to
advocate a just transition to sustainable energy
- What is sustainable energy?
- Why do we need to change from business-as-usual
(BAU)? - What are the elements and parameters of a just
transition? - What are the costs and who should pay them?
- What is possible or realistic and what are the
factors that determine what is possible? - How does South Africa initiate a just transition?
12What is sustainable energy? - RE EE
- Renewable energy that draws on resources that are
constantly replenished flux energy (mostly
solar in origin) rather than exhausting finite
hydrocarbon or uranium stock energy. - Conditions need to apply to hydropower (World
Commission on Dams) biomass sustainable
production competing land and water use. - Energy efficiency seeks maximum final output for
a given input - Everybody (business, industry, commercial and
government buildings, individuals role models)
could do more with less, also extending access - Includes conservation e.g. solar water heating
and passive solar design - Optimising benefits and reducing costs in medium
and long term.
..reliable, affordable, economically viable,
locally acceptable and environmentally
sound.. (UN - CSD)
13Why do we need to change from business-as-usual?
- National resource base Impacts of stock (fossil
and nuclear) energy use are unsustainable,
destroying or degrading the natural resource base
and causing rapidly escalating climate change - Human health The extraction, processing and
burning of hydrocarbons (sp. coal and oil) and
nuclear fuel are poisoning communities - Energy security national and local less
dependence on imports and more wealth staying
within communities - Competitivness in global economy reduced
material input costs, vulnerability to global
markets and liability for regional and global
pollution - Stock energy resources are finite hydrocarbon
resources are limited, with oil production near
its peak, are required as feedstock material and
could be more productively used in future
(uranium also limited) - Human rights large-scale, centralised and
industry-oriented energy development increases
dependence on trans-national corporations
14Why do we need to change from business-as-usual?
- Renewable energy
- Creates more jobs than conventional energy
development - Allows community participation / ownership not
simply customers - Growth industries with established export
potential (e.g. India) - Human scale with minimal impacts (water, land,
air and atmosphere) - Uses plentiful resources currently going to waste
less entropy - Energy efficiency
- Value for money and resources
- Better investment than new elec. generation
fuels processing plants - Accelerated technology development moving to
best available - Full-cost accounting encourages application of
triple bottom line in meeting energy service
needs
15Employment in coal-based electricity generation
in South AfricaSource Own analysis, based on
data from Eskom (1989), Eskom (2002), Statistics
SA (1995), Statistics SA (2002), NER (2000), DME
(2003c).
16Summary conventional energy employment potential
jobs/MW insalled and/GWh produced
Core RETs employment potential data (gross direct
jobs/MW and /GWh)
17- and we do have the policy to address these
issues, some in development and some begging for
implementation
18SA Policy and implementation
- White Paper on Energy Policy (DME, 1998)
- Ensuring that an equitable level of national
resources is invested in renewable technologies,
given their potential and compared to investments
in other supply options - White Paper on Renewable Energy
- is being published to ensure that the
renewable energy resources are used optimally. - Target ..additional 10 000 GWh (0.8 Mtoe)
renewable energy contribution.. by 2013this is
equivalent to two 660MW coal-fired power
stations - But this would produce 10 000 GWh per annum
19SA Policy and implementation
- Draft Energy Efficiency Strategy (DME, 2004)
- 12 reduction against projected demand for 2014
review in 2007 this target is by no means a
mandatory requirement, but rather a guideline to
aspire to. - Mandatory energy efficiency standards will be
an important and integral part of the Strategy.
yet to be developed - Renewable Energy Strategy (overdue)
- R14.2 million for direct once-off subsidies in
first 5 years, followed by a review of the target - Electricity Regulation Bill (comment period just
ended) - Concerns re grid access and fair treatment of
SMMEs
20 SA Policy and implementation
- NEMA (1998)
- EIA regulations incl. identify alternative sites
for projects, but little on alternative
technologies / strategies and practice and energy
projects exempt DME vs DEAT - Draft Air Quality Act (2004)
- air pollution carries a high social, economic
and environmental cost that is seldom borne by
the polluter - Controlled emitters with emissions standards for
appliances and activities, but standards yet to
be set and no power to introduce pollution
charges (Treasury Environmental Fiscal Reform -
process unclear and focused on raising revenue
rather than redirecting investment and budget
allocations and implementing constitutional
rights
21What are the elements and parameters of a just
transition?
- Access to basic energy services is recognised as
a human right and responsibility of the state - Meeting energy service needs without compromising
other human rights equity, including gender and
grandchildren - No net job loss and improved worker health
safety - Implementation of the polluter pays principle
- Application of cradle to grave responsibility and
liability - Public participation in planning and
decision-making
22How to initiate a just transition?
- Acknowledge the need and the challenge incl.
vested interests - Political agenda elaboration of existing
priorities - Integrated Energy Planning phase 2 initiated,
but short term - Policies and Measures (PAMs) for RE EE
- Corporate accountability - not just voluntary
agreements without monitoring, independent
verification and penalties - Popular awareness Individual behavioral change
instigating a culture of responsibility and
sharing ubuntu - International co-operation and co-ordination
multilateral agreements to stop the race to the
bottom of global competition
23 The Independent PAMs Study
- UCT study Priority PAMs
- Legislate codes and standards for energy
efficient buildings in government, commercial and
residential sectors - Set mandatory equipment standards for industry
and commerce - Set targets for renewable electricity generation
(15 elec by 2020) - Subsidise the production for renewable
electricity - Implement a pollution tax (with exception for
households) - The research concluded that these measures could
be implemented with little or no cost to the
economy, with significant savings for some
stakeholders, net job creation and significant
human health and environmental benefits.
24The Employment Potential of RE in South Africa
- AGAMA study conclusions
- RE electricity generating technologies will
create 36 400 new jobs when providing 15 of the
total electricity mix in 2020 without taking jobs
away from the coal-based electricity generating
sector if RET deployment displaces coal, further
additional jobs created - A biodiesel and bioethanol programme that
replaces 15 of current petrol and diesel
consumption would see the ctreation of 350 000
new, direct jobs - Targeted deployment of solat water heaters will
result in the creation of at least 118 000 new,
direct jobs - more on the potential of RE in SA up to 2050 on
13 April at the third Sustainable Energy
Symposium, incl. Launch report
25What is possible or realistic and what are the
factors that determine what is possible?
- Available renewable energy resources can provide
for all current energy demand many times over - Technologies and materials exist to achieve a
factor 4 improvement in efficiency i.e.
achieve the same service with 25 of current
energy input (factor 10 possible) - but
- Exploitation of stock energies is one of the most
profitable enterprises under current market
conditions consumption profit - Developing countries do not have a third world
to plunder, nor the ecological space to follow
the development path of the North.
26What factors determine what is realistic?
- Millenium Development Goals
- Business as usual will lead to catastrophic
climate change, with Sub-Saharan Africa the
suffering the worst impacts - National security wars of the future will be
fought over water - Energy pricing stepped block tariff industry
not hide behind poor - Full cost accounting resource economics
- Technology transfer
- Equity in the greenhouse
27What are the costs and who should pay them?
- The longer we wait, the more it will cost, e.g.
stranded public investments in plants with
40-year lifespan - Avoiding dangerous climate change requires the
mobilisation of political will and financial
resources on the scale usually reserved for going
to war - Leveling the playing field, incl. subsidy reform
and polluter pays -
- Mandate of Development Banks and other IFIs
international finance institutions including
export credit agencies - Public spending for public benefit
- Common but differentiated responsibilities
28Conclusion
- A Just Transition to Sustainable Energy is
possible for - employment creation and poverty reduction,
through - Integrated Energy Planning from resource
extraction to end use with full cost-benefit
analysis done right this time, - A forward-looking policy agenda national and
international (not waiting for/dependent on
Northern finance) with an - Energy services approach, incl. needs and
benefits based pricing, - if there is clear political will and
implementation.