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GTZ: Vision & Mission

GTZ - Proklima Perspective on Sectoral Strategy in the RAC Servicing Sector HPMP Sectoral Working Groups Meeting 24 September 2009, Vigyan Bhawan, New Delhi. GTZ: Vision & Mission. Vision:

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GTZ: Vision & Mission

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  1. GTZ - ProklimaPerspective on Sectoral Strategy in the RAC Servicing SectorHPMP Sectoral Working Groups Meeting24 September 2009, Vigyan Bhawan, New Delhi

  2. GTZ: Vision & Mission • Vision: • We successfully promote international cooperation which contributes to sustainable development throughout the world. • Our company is strengthening its position on the global market for international cooperation services. • Mission: • We are a government-owned corporation with international operations. • We implement contracts for the German Federal Government and other national and international public and private-sector clients. • We further political, economic, ecological and social development worldwide, and so improve people’s living conditions. • We provide services that support complex development and reform processes.

  3. GTZ worldwide Russian Federation • Moskau • Kaliningrad • Omsk Germany • Novosibirsk • Altay • Saratow Belgium Ukraine Bosnia-Herzegovina Kasachstan Rumänien Mongolia Serbia and Montenegro Croatia Uzbekistan Georgia Kosovo Bulgarien Kyrgyzstan Mazedonien Azerbaijan Armenia Tajikistan Albania Palestine Afghanistan Peoples‘ Republic of China Maroc Jordan Algeria Pakistan Nepal Egypt Dominican Republic Saudi-Arabia VAR Guatemala El Salvador India Bangladesh Honduras Mauretania Mali Haiti Tschad Viet Nam Niger Nicaragua Yemen Senegal Thailand Costa Rica Burkina Faso Cambodia Philippines Guinea Nigeria Ghana Ethiopia Cote d‘Ivoire Sri Lanka Colombia Cameroon Benin Uganda Togo DemocraticRepublic Congo Kenya Ecuador Rwanda Burundi Indonesia Brazil Tanzania Peru Angola Malawi Zambia Bolivia Mozambique Zimbabwe Paraguay Madagascar as at 2007 Namibia Argentina Republic of South Africa Countries with Development Cooperation Office Chile Countries with GTZ-Office Countries with GTZ-Büros with special duties GTZ Head Office, Eschborn und Offices inBerlin, Bonn und Brussels Tunesia

  4. Proklima: Mandate Start in 1996, mandated by the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ). Proklima advises governments of partner countries on drafting local regulations and setting policies that will comply with all international environmental agreements. Proklima assists companies in replacing ozone depleting technologies with environmentally friendly and economically attractive alternatives. Proklima ensures that promoted replacement technologies comply not only with the obligations under the Montreal Protocol but also with other international environmental agreements, such as the Kyoto Protocol.

  5. GTZ Proklima has implemented over 150 projects in more than 40 countries since 1996, with an overall volume of close to US$ 40 million. It is thus the biggest bilateral programme to be associated with the Multilateral Fund for the Implementation of the Montreal Protocol. Interested in more information about GTZ-Proklima? http://www.gtz.de/en/themen/umwelt-infrastruktur/13841.htm Interested in more information about GTZ? http://www.gtz.de

  6. Role of bilateral agencies in CFC Phase-out

  7. ECOFRIG (1992-2002) • 1992: ECOFRIG projectlaunched as an Indo-Swiss-German collaboration. • Goal: Contributing to a timely, self-reliant and sustainable phase-out of CFCs in the Indian domestic and commercial refrigeration sector. • Approach: Promotion of low GWP hydrocarbon refrigerant as replacement for CFC refrigerants. • 1st Phase: Application of low GWP cyclopentane foam technology as a replacement of CFC-12, avoiding the transitional HCFC-141b route. • 2nd Phase: Godrej & Boyce Mfg Co Ltd. Appliance Division converted to hydrocarbon blend refrigerant. The full size conversion project was implemented with support from the Multilateral Fund to the Montreal Protocol in 2001/2002). • Total investment by Switzerland and Germany: approx. 10 million USD (the industry contribution exceeded this investment).

  8. HIDECOR (2001-2004) Human and Institutional Development in Ecological Refrigeration • 2001: HIDECOR projectlaunched as an Indo-Swiss collaboration. • Goal: Providing training on good servicing practices and hydrocarbon based retrofit to service technicians in the Refrigeration and Air-Conditioning (RAC) sector. • Geographic focus: • Initial states: Tamilnadu, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra, Gujrat, Delhi and West Bengal • States added later: Punjab, Haryana, U.P., Rajasthan and Kerala (in anticipation of NCCoPP).

  9. NCCoPP (2004-2010) National CFC Consumption Phase-out Plan • 2004: NCCoPP projectlaunched based on the Agreement between India and the Executive Committee of the Multilateral Fund. • Goal: Providing training on good servicing practices and to service technicians in the Refrigeration and Air-Conditioning (RAC) sector. • Geographic focus: All over India. • Funding: 6.3 million USD

  10. Overall project management (Lead implementing agency), Co-financing of training, ESS facilitation and distribution, Role of Key Players / Implementing Agencies • Training component • Equipment support (ESS), Foam sector, Refrigeration (manufacturing) sector • Awareness component, Customs & Policy training component • Transport refrigeration sector

  11. Training infrastructure under NCCoPP New Training Cells (by NCCoPP) HIDECOR Training Cells

  12. Access Routes

  13. Improvement of Service Practices

  14. 20,000+ technicians trained. Remote areas of the country accessed (60% programmes were outside the major cities). Knowledge about CFC Phase-out and Good Service Practices is now wide-spread amongst small firms in covered areas. Training infrastructure and methodology available for HCFC phase-out but we need to maintain the momentum. More than 1,000 E&C units, recovery machines etc. distributed EcoCool newsletter regularly distributed to 20,000+ technicians updating on new technological developments and good servicing practices Enforcement agencies and customs officers are aware of CFC phase-out Marjor Achievements of HIDECOR & NCCoPP

  15. Relevance of Service Sector for HCFC Phase-out • Significant share of total HCFC consumption (>20%) • Probably more than 20,000 enterprises involved • Huge variety of applications • Most appliances serviced by technicians from informal sector after warranty period • Informal sector not covered by OEM training infrastructure • Sustainable phase-out needs to include service sector due to risk of reverse conversions

  16. Develop a comprehensive service sector profile (e.g. # of service enterprises & concentration, HCFC consumption per subsector, skill levels, servicing practices) Prioritisation of subsectors (low hanging fruits & high impact) Identifying all requirements for phase-out of HCFC in the servicing sector (awareness, training, equipment support) Assess scope for regulation and policy measures Layout of support structure (building on NCCoPP) Estimation of funding requirements for implementation Impact of the planned phase-out activities in ODP tonnes Develop monitoring and verification methodology Steps for Developing the Sector Strategy

  17. GTZ Proklima:Publication on options and implications of replacing HCFCs with natural refrigerants

  18. Main objective to highlight advantages and encourage consideration of natural refrigerants as replacements for R-22 Further objectives To present legislative implications of accelerated HCFC phase-out, and related issues Address possible natural alternatives Introduce and means of overcoming main hurdles, e.g., safety Provide technical assessments of options Give examples and case studies of use of natural refrigerants in systems previously using R-22 OBJECTIVES of this publication

  19. Thank you for your kind attention!

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