Transcript Slide 1

Climate change financial
instrument for energy
efficiency and renewable
energy projects in Latvia
Valdis Bisters
Director
Climate Policy and Technology
Department
Ministry of Environmental Protection and
Regional Development
Climate change policy
Climate change policy is on political agenda now and put
forward challenge for:
Scientists (to understand the problem and seek for
solutions)
Politicians (formulate of long, clear and binding post
2012 regime)
Business (invest into low carbon technologies,
mitigate fossil risks)
Society (accept and create demand for services and
change life styles)
Climate change is not only environment but also
economic prerogative
Climate change financial instrument
Green inevestment scheme under Kyoto protocol
article 17 – in Latvia Climate change financial
instrument (CCFI)
Established by law, implemented as state
budgetary programme
CCFI implementation launched
CCFI guiding principles – transparency,
accountability and efficiency
Programmatic with scaling-up of technology
deployment
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CCFI programming principles (1)
Additionality
Legal (ETS, landfill directive, building code,etc)
Financial (EU Structural funds, other
instruments)
Broad involvement of social partners
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Eligible costs (additional
environmental costs)
I = (IRES - Ifos ) x P
IRES – RES technology investment costs (Ls/kWth or Ls/kWel)
according to different scales
Ifos – fossil energy production investment costs (Ls/kWth or
Ls/kWel) according to the scale
P – intalled capacity of RES technology (kW).
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CCFI programming principles (2)
GHG emissions
Energy efficiency
Renewables
Efficient use of fossil
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Sectoral GHG emission in Latvia (2006)
Transport, 30,5%
Agriculture,
17,7%
Energy, 45,0%
Solvents and
other products,
0,6%
Waste, 6,8%
Industrial
processes, 2,2%
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Energy intensity (2005)
1.3
KPEP/IKP / TPES/GDP - 2005, (toe/000 $2000)
1.0
0.8
0.5
EU-27
0.3
0.0
0.3
EU-27
0.5
0.8
1.0
1.3
Elektroenerģijas patēriņš* / IKP /
Electricity consumption* / GDP - 2005, (kWh/$2000)
1.5
1.8
GR
AT
IT
GB
IE
DK
NL
OECD
FR
SE
DE
MT
CY
PT
BE
ES
LU
PL
HU
Latvija
SI
FI
BG
RO
SK
CZ
EE
LT
2.0
Source: IEA
Indicative Greening pipelines and Open
Calls
Energy supply-side management
Promotion of biomass use including CHP plants
Biogas recovery and use, including transport
Solar heat, geothermal, small hydro, wind, etc.
Energy demand-side management
Improved thermal energy efficiency
Improved use of electricity
Technological processes
Integrated demand-side and supply-side projects
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CCFI key measure of invesment efficiency
CO2 y / Ls
kg
CO2 emission factor – average 264 g/KWhth or 397g/KWhe replacing
fossil sources or electricity in the grid
Ls – CCFI funding requested
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Emisijas faktors
Fuel
tCo2/MWh
Coal
0,334
Peat (Wd=40%)
0,376
Petrol
0,249
Diesel
0,268
Heavy oils
0,278
Liquid gas
0,226
Other mineral oils
0,263
Natural gas
0,202
LVMĢC data
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Open calls under implementation
Energy efficiency in municipal buildings (LVL 26 193 405)
Energy efficiency in university buildings (LVL 7 028 040)
Complex measures for GHG reductions in municipal buildings
(LVL 8 521 500)
Complex measures for GHG reductions in state and municipality
professional education buildings (LVL 10 225 798)
Complex measures for GHG reductions in industrial buildings (LVL
9 839 256)
Technology conversion from fossil to renewable energy sources
(LVL 8 082 346)
Development of GHG reduction technologies (LVL 1 757 010)
Renewable energy use in transport sector (LVL 3 522 621)
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Open calls to be announced
Low energy housing (LVL 7 261 722)
Use of renewable energy sources for reeducation of greenhouse
gas emissions (LVL 27 716 876),
Renewable energy use in household sector (microgeneration) (LVL
11 399 481)
Efficient street lighting in municipalities (LVL 2 800 000 )
Development of GHG reduction technologies and pilot project
demonstration (LVL 2 793 646)
Public awareness raising on climate change issues (LVL 597 384)
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Thank you for attention!
More information
www.varam.gov.lv