1 / 22

United Nations Environment Programme , DTIE Program Officer, Mario LIONETTI mario.lionetti@unep.org

Financial support mechanisms for solar thermal applications. United Nations Environment Programme , DTIE Program Officer, Mario LIONETTI mario.lionetti@unep.org. UNEP Energy and Climate Finance. Why :

kiley
Download Presentation

United Nations Environment Programme , DTIE Program Officer, Mario LIONETTI mario.lionetti@unep.org

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Financial support mechanisms for solar thermal applications United Nations Environment Programme, DTIE Program Officer, Mario LIONETTI mario.lionetti@unep.org

  2. UNEP Energy and Climate Finance • Why: • Cost of getting on track to meet the climate goal (450 ppm scenario) requires globally additional spending nearly to18 trillion US$ on low-carbon energy technologies in 2010-2035 • Both business investments and consumer • spending • IEA – World Energy Outlook 2010

  3. UNEP Energy and Climate Finance • Vision: “Catalyse the creation of the sustainable energy finance industry.” • Removing investment barriers and developing markets for renewable energy and energy efficiency is the core focus of UNEP’s energy and climate finance work • Not being a financial institution allows UNEP to work in non-competitive ways with leaders in the banking community. • UNEP’s work is not to provide finance for projects, in contrast to the development banks, but to work directly with the finance industry to make investment happen.

  4. Within our End-User Finance programmes, UNEP helps to: • overcome market barriers • increase investment flows • to renewable energy • and energy efficiency • technologies

  5. Characteristics of UNEP’s Strategy Turning the finance sector into an ally promoting clean energy: • Supporting decision making, both amongst governments and financiers, helping to get policies enacted, and new financial instruments launched; • Financial support mechanisms used to reduce thefront-end barriers that hinder the development of renewable energy and energy efficiency markets; • Approaches for softening loan financing: es. interest rate reductions (Tunisia), etc..

  6. Strengths of UNEP’s Strategy • UNEP climate finance initiatives employ a variety of approaches and tools: • Institutional support for local governments • Multi-stakeholder approach (government, banks, suppliers, installers, state utility) • Technical support for setting up dedicated loan instrument • Targeted capacity building, training, communication and dissemination to specific financial incentives • Integrating carbon reduction benefits

  7. Montenegro SWH Programme • Consumer Finance • Domestic Solar Water Heating Systems • Selection of most competitive banks through a public tendert • Start of Project: March 2011 Tunisian PROSOL Programme • End-user Consumer Finance • Domestic Solar Water Heating Systems • As Sept 2010, 95,466 systems installed • Banks provided $58 million worth of loans • Consumer Loan repayment via the electricity bill • CERs sold for future programme Tunisian PROSOL ELEC • Consumer Finance • Domestic PV Systems • Loan repayment via the electricity bill • Interest rates subsidized by UNEP • State utility provides the inverter GSWH Chile Morocco Efficient Lighting Programme • Household receives up to 10 Compact Fluorescent Lightbulbs (CFLs) from state utility STEG • Cost of CFLs reimbursed over 2 yrs on electricity bill • Programme financed through KfW • Target of 22 million lamps Indian Solar Loan Programme • Consumer Finance • domestic PV systems • Canara and Syndicate Banks provided training and interest softening incentive • 2,017 bank branches • 19,560 homes financed Egyptian Programme: EGYSOL • Solar Water Heating Systems for hotels • Launch of project: March 2010 • 7 eligible suppliers certified and 6 hotels registered • Banks financing the purchase of the systems GSWH Mexico

  8. The Global Solar Water Heating Project • UNEP’s goal: improving the knowledge sharingon which today’s energy planning is done by the public and private sectors, in particular regarding new approaches to accelerate sustainable market transformationof Solar Water Heating. • How? • UNEP has the responsibility to: • - Monitor the implementation of activities undertaken across 6 countries and to manage global knowledge management system • - Provide technical assistance for the development of financial instruments.

  9. The Global Solar Water Heating Project • Two Project Documents concluded among UNDP, UNEP and the Governments of Chile and Mexico. • Outcomes • Increased demand of SWH systems based on the availability of attractive end-user financing mechanisms. • Possible Options • - Green mortgages • - Interest rate subsidy • - Guarantee Fund

  10. Applications of UNEP’s strategy : PROSOL: A Success Story in Tunisia* ( *Part of the Mediterranean Investment Facility - MIF)

  11. PROSOL is a financing support mechanism: • to create credit facilities using the state utility, • STEG asa channel for recovering the loan payments through the utility bill; • to help local banks build loan portfolios in RE area by implementing an interest rate subsidy • to provide to the end user a capital cost subsidy to partially reduce the SWH financing (Tunisian government has passed a law to provide 20% subsidy) The Tunisian Programme Solaire - PROSOL Upscaling the Market for Residential Solar Water HeatersWhat is it?

  12. PROSOL - How it works • UNEP & ANME established a2.4 m US$ Facility • STEG will promote the use of SWH by recovering the loan via a STEG customer’s utility bill • Banks provide loans to the end users by lowering the interest rates by 5-6 pointsbecause the risk of nonpayment is almost non-existent • The end user repays his loan via the STEG utility bill over 5 yearsto make the monthly payments equal to other conventional energy expenditures • UNEP provides an Interest Rate Subsidy to make a 0% interest loan to the end user.

  13. Main features of the financial scheme • A loan mechanism over a 5-year term and repayments through utility bills • A capital cost subsidy for each SWH provided by the Tunisian Govt (20% of system cost = 75 $/m² = existing gas subsidy) • Initially as a temporary measure (UNEP funded) • Later made permanent in legislation (2005) • Discounted interest rates on the loans • Full Interest Rate Subsidy Facility to0%, full benefit passed on to the customer

  14. Buy CHEAP and Pay SLOWLY SWH Size 200 liters 300 liters Net Cost of SWH USD 550 USD 700 Monthly payment (5 yrs) USD 9 USD 11.50 A Quick and Simplified Procedure Customer contacts the SWH supplier Customer fills out the application form at the SWH supplier office, presents his latest STEG bill and ID The installation is immediate once the application form and engagement form are signed PROSOL- What it does

  15. PROSOL Results

  16. Applications of UNEP’s strategy : • PROSOL Results 2005-2010 • 363,000m2SWH (~120,000 installations) • ~ 75 million US$ mobilized • (programme cost $2.4 million) • GOVERNMENT Target 2011 • 480,000m2(~160,000 installations)

  17. Evolution of the offer • 50 eligiblesuppliers, ( including 7 manufacturers) vs. 12suppliers in 2005 • 1100 eligible Installers (Micro companies) against 225 installers in 2005 • More than 7000direct jobs were created

  18. Key success factors in PROSOL • Involvement of the Energy State Utility (STEG) offered security to banks • A comprehensive communication and awareness raising campaign • UNEP interest rate subsidy

  19. Applications of UNEP’s strategy • Lessons learnt /1 • Technologies available; market uptake slow • But markets scale up quickly once banks start to lend. • Banks need help to get started - Necessity for Capacity Building • Assessing technologies, • Marketing new loans, • Kick-starting demand. • Capacity Building and Communication are mandatory for the development of the solar water heating market

  20. Applications of UNEP’s strategy • Lessons learnt /2 • PROSOL a driver for policy change • Lending gives feedback signal that technology is mature. • 20% capital cost subsidy for SWH was set by law • Decree 4/2006 reaffirmed VAT exemption and reduced custom duties for SWH • New target was set for Tunisia: 540,000 m2in 2007-2011 • PROSOL 2 launched in 2007 – Once UNEP funds finished • Entirely developed by local actors, continuityand certainty ensured • Contribution to the creation of a self-sustaining, long-term market for solar water heaters

  21. Three other on-going SWH financial support mechanisms in Tunisia: • PROSOL Collective - Hotels • PROSOL industrial - Food and textiles industries • PROSOL ELEC –Photovoltaic for households

  22. Thank You Project Officer: Mario LIONETTI mario.lionetti@unep.org http://www.unep.fr/energy/

More Related