Track 3
Partnerships for sustainable energy
Programme 11.00-11.10 Welcome by Bas Eickhout
11.10-11.25 Presentation by Jorge Vasconcelos
11:25-11:50 Interview Tjark Tjin-A-Tsoi
11:50-12:10 Presentation Kakanur Nagaraj Naidu
12:10-12:35 Presentation Robert Hermans and Carin Kruiskamp
12:35-12:45 Closing morning programme by Bas Eickhout
12:45-14:00 Lunch break
14:00-15:15 Round table session
15:15-15:30 Short break
15:30-16:00 Reflection at stage
16:00-18:00 Madurodam
Speakers
Bas Eickhout, member European Parliament, Group of the Greens/European Free Alliance
Jorge Vasconcelos, Chairman of NEWES, New Energy Solutions
Tjark Tjin-A-Tsoi, Director-general Statistics Netherlands
Kakanur Nagaraj Naidu, Joint Secretary, Economic Diplomacy Division, Ministry of External Affairs
Robert Hermans, Director of Statistics Netherlands Urban Data Centers
Carin Kruiskamp, Program manager Urban Data Centers at Statistics Netherlands
Mr. Jorge Vasconcelos
Chairman of NEWES, New Energy Solutions
EUROPEAN VIEW ON
RENEWABLE ENERGY
Jorge Vasconcelos
NEWES, New Energy Solutions
United Nations Public Service Forum 2017
Track 3: Partnerships for sustainable energy
The Hague, June 22, 2017
NEWES, New Energy Solutions June 22, 2017
Evolution of net electricity generation capacity additions in the EU
1995 – 2015
http://www.ewea.org/fileadmin/files/library/publications/statistics/EWEA-Annual-Statistics-2015.pdf
NEWES, New Energy Solutions June 22, 2017
MW
INTEGRATE
DIGITIZE
DECARBONIZE
A
B
THE 3 DIMENSIONAL EU ENERGY TRANSITION
NEWES, New Energy Solutions June 22, 2017
DIFFERENT
NATIONAL
PATHS
MAY COEXIST –
FULL
HARMONIZATION
IS NOT A PRE-
CONDITION FOR
WELL-
FUNCTIONING
IEM
SEVERAL ALTERNATIVE PATHS MAY LEAD TO 2030
BUT FULL CONSISTENCY IS !
NEWES, New Energy Solutions June 22, 2017
MULTI LEVEL
NEWES, New Energy Solutions June 22, 2017
PARIS AND BEYOND
WORLD
COUNTRY X
SECTOR A
SECTOR B
...
COUNTRY Y
NEWES, New Energy Solutions June 22, 2017
EL
EC
TR
ICIT
Y
NA
TU
RA
L G
AS
DIS
TR
ICT
HE
AT
ING
&
CO
OL
ING
TR
AN
SP
OR
T
WA
ST
E T
O
EN
ER
GY
EN
ER
GY
ST
OR
AG
E
...
CO2
INFORMATION
NEWES, New Energy Solutions June 22, 2017
MULTI SECTOR
NEWES, New Energy Solutions June 22, 2017
MEMBER STATES
ENERGY-RELATED SECTORS
DECISION LEVELS
CONSISTENCY
ACROSS
AND OVER TIME…
Sourc
e:
htt
p:/
/im
ages.g
izm
ag.c
om
/galle
ry_lrg/9
586_607083272
9.jp
g
NEWES, New Energy Solutions June 22, 2017
NEWES, New Energy Solutions June 22, 2017
LEVEL PLAYING
FIELD
(GREEN) TAXATION
REGULATION
CARBON PRICING
NEWES, New Energy Solutions June 22, 2017
POLICY CONSISTENCY AND A LEVEL PLAYING FIELD
ARE IMPORTANT FOR :
CITIZENS
ENERGY CONSUMERS AND TAXPAYERS
INVESTORS
The complex choices around transition to a low carbon future and new technical developments,
demand a greater focus on consistency and co-ordination in energy market design, system
operation and governance and regulatory frameworks across the whole energy system.
NEWES, New Energy Solutions June 22, 2017
RECOMMENDATIONS:
1) Establish a high level Advisory Committee to oversee, monitor and advise on
consistency in policies and operational developments across different energy
systems and different decision levels.
The Committee should propose legal or regulatory action when consistency is
at risk, threatening consumer welfare or the achievement of climate and
energy policy objectives.
2) Redefine and reallocate market and system operation functions and roles to be
consistent with decisions about the targeted transition path to a low carbon
future.
3) Redesign markets and system operation arrangements to manage the
complexities and control issues raised by new ICT at different levels of energy
systems, and to realise the opportunities they open up.
4) Create new governance mechanisms and structured dialogue to guide the
process of reform.
Questions?
Mr. Tjark Tjin-A-Tsoi
Director General Statistics Netherlands
Mr. Kakanur Nagaraj Naidu
Joint Secretary, Economic Diplomacy Division, Ministry of
External Affairs
India : Moving Towards A
Sustainable Energy Future
Ministry of External
Affairs
Economic Diplomacy
Division
Government of India
K. Nagaraj Naidu, Joint Secretary, Economic Diplomacy
Total Installed Power Capacity: 329 GW
Installed Coal-based capacity: 194 GW…thermal
still mainstay.
Peak Demand: 165.2 GW
Issues: Coal Supply; T&D Losses; and poor
health of Power Utilities.
Efforts being made to adopt HELE technologies
– SC, ASC, USC, AUSC, Coal Liquefaction, Coal
Gassification, Carbon Capture & Utilization to
keep carbon-dioxide intensity as low as
possible.
41 GW of Supercritical capacity addition already
achieved.
46 GW of Supercritical thermal capacity under
construction.
Thermal capacity addition after 2018 will
mandatorily use Supercritical technology… 3
GW of inefficient thermal capacity has been
retired.
From 2027 all new thermal fleet will be Ultra
Super Critical.
Indigenous Research ongoing to develop
Advanced Ultra Super Critical Technology
(Steam parameters: 300 kg/cm2 pressure and
temperature of 700°C.)
MEA-ED
2017
Installed Capacity India Power Situation:
Ther
mal,
67% Nucle
ar, 2%
Hydro
, 14%
Renew
able,
18%
24.70
%
31.70
%
43.60
%
States Centre Private
59.1
0%
7.70
%
0.30
%
C…
Gas
Oil
Ownership
Thermal
Capacity
Village
Electrification
A village would be declared as
electrified if:
Distribution transformer and
distribution lines are provided in
the inhabited locality.
Electricity is provided to public
places like Schools, Village Local
Administration Office, Health
Centers, Dispensaries,
Community centers etc.
15th
August 2015: Govt. pledged to
electrify all un-electrified villages within
1000 days – by May 2018.
The Village Electrification Scheme: To
provide 24x7 affordable & quality power
to all villages with a capital outlay of Rs.
75,893 crores ($11.4 Billion)
An integrated scheme covering all
aspects of rural power distribution –
Feeder Segregation, installation of new
transformers, last-mile infrastructure,
smart metering etc.
Scheme provides grant to the States at
60% of project cost. Additional
15% grant, on fulfillment of milestones.
85% grant for special category States.
Additional 5% grant on fulfillment of
milestones.
June 2017: Out of the 18,452 un-
electrified census villages in the
country, 13,685 villages have already
been electrified.
New Definition: All households in
the village should be electrified.
GARV
App Village Electrification : 13,685 / 18,452
Household Electrification: 135,002,738
/ 179,284,929
More than 350 Electrical
Engineers deployed in the field
to monitor the progress of
village electrification works.
GARV Mobile
App (garv.gov.in) was
developed for monitoring
progress of electrification.
Electrical Engineers update in
the GARV App, field
photographs, data and other
information.
On 20th
December 2016, the
GARV App had been launched
for monitoring Household
electrification in all 600,000
Villages.
Updated GARV has the special
feature of SAMVAD – engaging
the citizens for establishing
transparency and
accountability.
Power for All (PFA)
24x7 power to all households, industry,
commercial businesses, agriculture farm
holdings, and any other electricity consuming
entity by 2018-19.
Integrated Power Development Scheme:
Outlay: $9.8 Billion – smart metering,
underground cabling, infrastructure
upgrading, GIS substations, IT enablement for
energy accounting etc., in urban areas.
Extending Transmission Capacity:
Projects worth $15 Billion initiated in 2015-16.
50,215 Km of transmission lines laid during
2014-16 – 69 Km of circuit laying per day.
128,403 MVA of sub-station capacity added
during 2014-16.
Central Govt. scheme to reform State
Distribution companies (UDAY): Aimed at taking
over the debts of Distribution companies,
lowering the cost of debt servicing and improving
operational efficiency through infra. augmenting,
smart metering, and improved collection
efficiency through public participation.
Benefits of Rural Electrification
Increased productivity in
agriculture
Reducing drudgery for women
Improvement in children
education
Connectivity to all villages and
households
Viable and reliable electricity
services in rural areas
Better delivery of health &
education services
Improvement in access to
communications (radio,
telephone, television, mobile)
Improvement in public safety
through lighting.
Total outlay: $11.5
Billion
Grant Component: $9.5
Billion from the Central
Government.
Renewable
Energy
Grid-connected Capacity
(Feb 2017): Renewable
Source
GW
Wind 32.28
Solar 12.50
Bio-Power 8.18
Small Hydro 4.38
Waste to Power 0.11
TOTAL 57.47
Reduce the emissions intensity per unit GDP by 33
to 35% below 2005 by 2030.
Increase the share of non-fossil-based power
capacity from 30% today to about 40% by 2030.
Create an additional carbon sink of 2.5 to 3 billion
tons of CO2 through additional forest and tree
cover.
India’s Intended Nationally Determined
Contribution (INDC)
India needs as much as $200
billion to meet its new target
of installing 100 GW of solar
power capacity and 60 GW of
wind power capacity by 2022.
India’s estimated
renewable energy
potential: 900 GW
Solar power: 750 GW
Wind: 102 GW (80 mt
mast height);
Small Hydro: 20 GW
Bio-energy: 25 GW
MEA-ED
2017
SOLAR
National Solar Mission: 100
GW by 2022…Capacity break-
up:
• Rooftop Scheme
: 40GW
• Entrepreneur Scheme :
20GW
• Already planned :
10GW
• States driven :
10GW
• Public Sector :
10GW
• Private Sector :
5GW
• Independent Power
Producers : 5GW
$100 Billion investment over the next 7
years.
India’s Solar Potential: 750
GW
MEA-ED
2017
12.5 GW of Solar Capacity already
installed & grid connected.
International Solar Alliance (ISA):
121 prospective member countries
between the Tropics of Cancer &
Capricorn.
ISA will be a Treaty-based organization,
headquartered in India. ISA Framework
Agreement opened up for signature in
Marrakech during COP22.
33 Signatories and 6 Ratifications –
India, France, Nauru, Mauritius, Fiji, and
Tuvalu have ratified the Framework
Agreement - 15 needed to set up the ISA
as a legal entity.
If India meets its renewable
energy target, no additional
coal power will be needed
till 2027
Green Grid Corridor: Launched in May
2017. Aimed at integrating renewable
energy with thermal energy for
transmission of power through ultra high-
voltage direct current to high
consumption centers located thousands
of kms away.
17.9 15
12.96
8.79
8.3 6.4 6 5.17
4.34
2.62
2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
India – 3rd
largest solar
market in the world.
New Solar capacity addition
in 2017 expected to reach
8.8 GW in 2017 (an increase
of 76% over 2016).
Declining Solar Tariffs (kW
Hr)
Figures in
Rupees
-
85
%
Declining Solar power tariff because
of:
Sharply declining prices of solar
panels
Better structuring of the project -
reduces risk for project developers;
and
Better currency hedging deals -
makes financing available at
competitive cost.
May 2017: Solar tariff
dropped to Rs. 2.62 (4 cents)
per unit in a bidding for a 250
MW project in Bhadla,
Rajasthan.
0.27
cents
0.04
cents
Kamuthi Solar Power Project, Tamil Nadu State, India:
Capacity: 550 MW, Project Completion Time: 8
months; Cost: US$ 679 million.
Solar Panels: 2.5 million panels; Area Covered: 4
square miles,
No. of Homes Powered: 150,000 homes.
World's largest solar plant
Electric
Vehicles
Target: By 2030 almost all vehicles in the country
are powered by electricity.
5,000 Electric Cars currently on road.
New Electric Taxi Service launched in Nagpur.
“India Leaps
Ahead:
Transformative
Mobility
Solution”,
produced by NITI
Aayog and Rocky
Mountain
Institute,
Colorado.
Savings of US$
60 billion in
diesel and petrol
costs
Cut down as
much as 1
gigatonne (GT) of
carbon emissions
by 2030.
1 May 2016: Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala
Yojana (PMUY) Scheme was launched in
Balia, Uttar Pradesh.
$1.2 Bn scheme for providing 50 million
new LPG connections for BPL families from
2016 to 2019.
How does the Subsidy work?
Subsidy of Rs. 1600/- per household
covering the security deposit charges of
one cylinder, pressure regulator, hose pipe
(1.2 meters), installation charges, and
domestic gas consumer card (DGCC)
Booklet is given to the Oil Marketing
Companies.
Beneficiaries buy the gas stove or the Oil
Marketing Companies can finance
purchase of LPG stove on installment
basis.
12 cylinders (14.2-kg) supplied to each
household in a year.
Director Benefit Transfer (DBT): 1/3 of
the market price of the LPG cylinder is
transferred in advance directly into bank
accounts of individuals, who then buys the
gas at market rates.
Beneficiaries:
June 20, 2017: 23.75 million LPG
connections given
Why Free LPG connection to BPL
families?
Access to clean cooking fuel.
Addresses health problems caused by
use of traditional sources of cooking
fuel such as fire wood, coal, cow dung,
etc.
Enhance productivity of woman and
raise their quality of life by removing
drudgery associated with collection of
wood.
Free LPG
scheme
“Give it up” and
“Give back”
Under the “Give it up” and “Give
back” – affluent consumers who could
afford to buy LPG at the market price,
were encouraged to give up their
entitlement to subsidy.
Over 12 million consumers have
given up their LPG subsidy which has
helped in ensuring access to LPG
connections to the under-privileged
people.
LPG coverage in India has now
increased to 72%.
USD 6.5 billion of subsidy has been
transferred directly to the
beneficiaries bank accounts in the last
two years. Estimated saving of over
USD 3.2 billion in two years to the
government.
Benefits of providing 100% access
to clean energy: Would impact 6
of the 8 millennium development
goals:
(1) Eradicate extreme hunger and
poverty by increasing economic
potential of women & reducing
economic loss due to bad health
(2) Empower our women
(3) Reduce child mortality
(4) Improve maternal health
(5) Ensure environmental
sustainability and
(6) Combat tuberculosis.
Households with
annual incomes
of US$15,000
plus no longer
eligible for
subsidized LPG
LED Bulb
Scheme Target:
Replace 770 million incandescent
bulbs with LEDs.
Distribution:
Scheme prioritized for all towns with
population above 100,000.
The bulbs, with a 3-year warranty, are
distributed to customers who register
through the EESL website or by
sending SMS.
Impact:
Reduction of 20 GW load and Energy
savings of 105 billion kwh; Reduction
in Green House Gas emissions of about
80 million tons every year; and annual
saving in electricity bills of $6 Billion.
Domestic Efficient Lighting
Programme (DELP)
Launched on 1 May 2015.
Production:
State-run Energy Efficiency
Services Ltd (EESL), the nodal
agency for implementation of the
DELP scheme.
EESL aggregates demand across
country.
Procures LED bulbs in large
quantity for distribution to
consumers through state
distribution companies or utilities.
Price Reduction:
9W LED bulb prices have fallen to
Rs. 64.5 ($1) from Rs. 310 ($4.81).
243 million LED bulbs
disbursed
The Street Light National Program Scheme is expected to replace 35 million
conventional street lights with LEDs.
http://www.ujala.gov.in/
Standards & Labelling
Program
Bureau of Energy Efficiency
initiated the S&L program for
Equipment and Appliances in
2006.
Objective:
To provide the consumer an
informed choice about the
energy saving.
Cost saving potential of the
relevant marketed product.
The Scheme invoked for 21
appliances of which 8 have
been notified under mandatory
labelling since 2010.
India’s Bureau of Energy Efficiency
has designed the Super Efficient
Equipment Program (SEEP) to
bring accelerated transformation
for super-efficient appliances by
providing financial stimulus
innovatively at critical points of
intervention.
Energy Conservation Building Code
ECBC was developed for new
commercial buildings.
It sets minimum energy standards for
new commercial buildings having a
connected load of 100 kW or contract
demand of 120 KVA and above.
Currently, 8 States and Union
Territories have notified and adopted
the code.
Bureau of Energy Efficiency has also
developed a voluntary Star-Rating
Program based on the actual
performance of a building for 4
categories of buildings – Residential,
Commercial, Hospitality, and Retail.
PAT Scheme
Performance Achieve Trade (PAT) Scheme launched in
2012, concluded its first cycle in March 2015.
PAT Cycle-1 had 427 Designated Consumers (DCs) and
achieved reduction of 8.67 Million Tons of Oil Equivalent
(MTOE).
3.8 Million Energy Saving Certificates were issued for PAT-1.
PAT Cycle 2 will have a total of 621 designated consumers
from 3 additional sectors – Railways, Refineries and
Electricity Distribution Companies – with an overall target
of 8.87 MTOE.
Transparency
Govt. is leading the initiative towards ensuring greater
transparency and accountability.
Mobile Apps offering Real time information have been
launched.
GARV App: Shows status of Village Electrification
UJALA App: Helps citizens monitor LED bulb
distribution.
PRAVAH App: Provides information on electricity
price and its availability.
UDAY App: To provide information on the health of
DISCOMs
Provides
information on
electricity price
and its
availability.
Vidyut Pravah
http://vidyutpravah.in/
Thank You
Questions?
Mr. Robert Hermans
Statistics Netherlands
Carin Kruiskamp
Statistics Netherlands
Robert Hermans |Director CBS Urban Data Centres | Statistics Netherlands (CBS)
Carin Kruiskamp |Program manager CBS Urban Data Centres | Statistics Netherlands (CBS)
CBS Urban Data Centers Better Data, Better City, Better Life
CBS – Statistics Netherlands Autonomous Public Body with a Legal Entity (“ZBO”)
Bonaire
2000+
The Hague Heerlen
NL
EU Other
180 mEur
125 mEur
20 mEur
35 mEur
[2017]
Vision on the role of CBS
Pro-actively supply
actionable intelligence using
independent, high quality and coherent
statistical information
to support
policy and decision making
and
opinion forming
Data collection
Survey
PRIMARY DATA
SECONDARY DATA
Registers
Big Data = SENSOR
DATA
Data Exhaust Internet Social Media …
Advanced Data Collection
Survey Data Admin Data Sensor Data
< 1985
1985 - 2015
> 2015
minimal survey
footprint
SDGs
High Resolution
Wide Range of other Phenomena
CBS Urban Data Center
Smart City Data driven, evidence based, open data, big data
Smarter use of data
Beter understanding
Better decisions
Beter & more efficiënt use of tax payers money
1
2
11
Probably
11 CBS Urban Data Centres &
2 CBS Provincial Data Centres
in The Netherlands
by end 2017
3 10
6
4
5 7
8 9
Urban
Data Center
+ 1 Crossborder Data
Center …
Stimulatie elektrisch rijden
01 Unique collaboration CBS and The Hague
02 Combining data
03 Rich data sources
04 Quality, privacy security and ISO certification
4 Advantages of an URBAN DATA CENTRE
In their own words
Leegstandsbepaling op basis van basisregistraties
Fighting poverty in the City of The Hague
55
Smarter data create the input for a better ‘’poverty fighting policy’ This leads to a genuine data driven city government The ultimate goals is to reduce the number of poor people and to save
substantial city budget expenditure in the Social Domain.
Turnover restaurants better understanding creates input for policy-making in organizing events
Leegstandsbepaling op basis van basisregistraties
Using data to place solarpanels on their most suitable location Map gradient and surface contactspaces, by combining several data
57
Using data to find people who invest in durable energy solutions Map also social charactaristics of people (target group analyses). Possible results: Who are more inclined to invest in durable goods. How can you reach other target groups (behaverioul insights).
Electrical cars in city neighbourhoods
Input for investment-decisions
Electrical cars in Eindhoven: 2424 (2,5 %)
Electrical cars in Zwolle: 1007 (growth of 35% since 2015)
Elektrische auto’s in Eindhoven, 2016
Map transitions in transportation options
Input to increase mobility and investment-decisions
Measure energy consumption of traffic and transportation: information on vehicles, amount of traffic, but also distance to public facilities
Traffic Intensity
Road Sensor Network
Make better traffic statistics
Exploratory research: energy saving chart on local level
Potential in saving energy
Possible result: % of energy saving per measure per province or municipality or even neighbourhood
For example: Roof isolation, Floor isolation, Cavity wall isolation and more
Map energy usage for a more aimed energy policy for the built enviroment
Monitoring energy usage in a sector within a municipality: • Per activity (for example schools per student or
hospitals per bed) • Compare nationally or internationally
Combine data to reduce energy consumption in the city of Eindhoven
Urban
Data Center
UN World Data Forum
Stimulatie elektrisch rijden
Urban
Data Center
UDC concept in Argentina
Stimulatie elektrisch rijden
Urban
Data Center
UDC concept in South Africa
Stimulatie elektrisch rijden
Urban
Data Center
UDC concept in
Maharashtra State India
Stimulatie elektrisch rijden
Leegstandsbepaling op basis van basisregistraties CBS Urban Data Centres: challenges and solutions
66
Leegstandsbepaling op basis van basisregistraties CBS Urban Data Centres: challenges and solutions
67
Leegstandsbepaling op basis van basisregistraties CBS Urban Data Centres: challenges and solutions
or ?
68
Leegstandsbepaling op basis van basisregistraties CBS Urban Data Centres: challenges and solutions
69
Leegstandsbepaling op basis van basisregistraties CBS Urban Data Centres: challenges and solutions
70
Leegstandsbepaling op basis van basisregistraties CBS Urban Data Centres: challenges and solutions
How to start ?
71
Leegstandsbepaling op basis van basisregistraties CBS Urban Data Centres: challenges and solutions
How to organize ?
72
Leegstandsbepaling op basis van basisregistraties CBS Urban Data Centres: challenges and solutions
Connecting different organizations and cultures
73
Leegstandsbepaling op basis van basisregistraties CBS Urban Data Centres: challenges and solutions
74
Leegstandsbepaling op basis van basisregistraties CBS Urban Data Centres: challenges and solutions
CBS as a threat for local researchers?
75
Leegstandsbepaling op basis van basisregistraties CBS Urban Data Centres: challenges and solutions
Conclusions and recommendations
76
JUNE 23rd 2017
Announcement of the
CBS Urban Data Centre
The Hague
June 23rd 2017
during the
UN-conference
Public Service Day
2017 at the
World Forum The Hague
Questions?
Lunchbreak
Please be back at 13:55h.
Table hosts
Ivo Schmidt, policy coordinator, European Commission
Nico Tillie, Director European Office World Council on City Data
Carin Kruiskamp, Program manager Urban Data Centers at Statistics Netherlands (CBS)
Discussion points round table
Public services are (not) sufficiently open to data innovations and their applications.
Municipalities often govern blindfolded because they hardly ever apply the numbers.
Data-driven policy is a cost-saving investment in the long run.
Governments should create more policy coherence to accelerate the use of sustainable energy.
The way in which the use of energy is taxed and financed is not sufficient enough for using and creating more sustainable energy.
Reflection table hosts
Ivo Schmidt, policy coordinator, European Commission
Nico Tillie, Director European Office World Council on City Data
Carin Kruiskamp, Program manager Urban Data Centers at Statistics Netherlands (CBS)
Follow-up programme
Today
16:00-18:00 Madurodam
18:00-21:00 Dinner Gemeentemuseum
Tomorrow
09:00-09:45 Plenary opening (starts strictly at 9h)
10:00-11:30 Reflection sessions
11:30-13:30 Innovation Fair and lunch
13:30-16:15 Plenary sessions (Youth Declaration, Chair summary,
Ministerial conversation, Awards ceremony)