Saturday, December 3, 2011

Online Course: Regulation and Sustainable Energy in Developing Countries

This week, Leonardo Energy and the Clean Energy Solutions Center began a 10-session online course on Regulation and Sustainable Energy in Developing Countries. The course is conducted as a series of 1-hour webinars, and covers topics including: renewable energy and rural electrification policies, feed-in tariffs, cases of massive scale RE dissemination, and cases of successful energy efficiency policies.

Click here to view more content and register for the course.

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

RENEW workshop - "New realities in energy and development"

Last week RENEW hosted a workshop describing "New realities in energy and development" at the Institute for Environmental Studies (IVM), VU Amsterdam. The workshop convened the broader Dutch energy and development community and discussed recent issues, challenges, and perspectives in energy access. Approximately 30 energy and development professionals representing the private sector, civil society, policy, and academia contributed to lively discussions throughout the day.

View the workshop programme here, and see our Events page to download individual presentations. A short document summarizing discussions will be added soon.

Friday, October 7, 2011

Stoves charging phones

In the post below, we mentioned two very fresh approaches changing the cookstove landscape from dissemination to market penetration. We also mentioned that the stoves in question have been changing. While some "traditional" stoves like the Rocket are being redesigned and mass manufactured for higher quality, there have also been some serious stove feature advancements. 

Here's a look at a stove from BioLite that uses thermoelectric generation to provide charging services, either for LEDs or a mobile phone, for a target price of $20:




Read more about the BioLite stove at The Charcoal Project and in Fast Company.

Monday, October 3, 2011

Business innovation and improved cookstoves

The world of improved cookstoves has become increasingly more interesting with greater technological and business innovation in the sector. The viability of carbon financed activities (both voluntary and compliant) with new rules and programmatic approaches, has drawn greater interest from private sector actors, while advances in cookstove design and manufacturing have made these new implementation models feasible. Below are two examples of innovative approaches we've been excited about:

WorldStove's LuciaStove and INYENYERI
Photo credit: Jonathan Kalan
Manufactured in Italy, at first glance the LuciaStove by WorldStove hardly seems a likely solution for household energy in low income markets. A closer look at the stove and intended implementation models (i.e. WorldStove's Five-Step Program) quickly reveals the potential social, economic, and environmental benefits that the stove can deliver. The stoves are flat-packed and assembled in country, delivering a feature of local job creation. The stoves themselves are pyrolytic, producing a blue cooking flame from the combustion of pelletized local biomass. As an added bonus, the sophistication of the burn process produces biochar - a substance increasingly discussed and researched for its carbon sequestration and fertilization potential. While there are indeed challenges for the stove (such as first cost and local tastes), it is an interesting new look at household energy.

One of the latest deployments of the LuciaStove is underway by INYENYERI, a startup Rwandan social benefit company. A few of us had the good fortune of learning about INYENYERI in great depth from the source - founder Eric Reynolds and marketing director Jean Bosco Musana - on a picturesque shore overlooking Lake Kivu earlier this summer. INYENYERI brings an aggressive and refreshing approach to the household energy challenge, and will piloting a number of varying business models during their market research phase this year. For more information, have a look at profiles by the New York Times and NextBillion, as well as their August newsletter.

The Paradigm Project
The Paradigm Project has a goal of bringing 5 million improved cookstoves to the world by 2020, and is built around a stove that is perhaps more familiar to the broader household energy community - the Rocket stove. Carbon finance is integral to Paradigm's model, allowing them to sell both imported and locally produced versions of the stoves at subsidized prices. While many improved cooking stove projects and enterprises are underway with similar logic, the Paradigm Project is set apart by its first-in-class marketing. Check out the trailer for their self-produced series on stoves and energy poverty, "Stoveman", below, and make sure to visit their website.




Two recommendations for peer-reviewed literature related to this post: 
2011, Shrimali et al, Improved stoves in India: A study of sustainable business models (Energy Policy)
2009, Bailis et al, Arresting the Killer in the Kitchen: The promises and pitfalls of commercializing improved cookstoves (World Development)

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

RENEW workshop Kigali - presentation materials uploaded

In June, RENEW hosted an energy access practitioner workshop in collaboration with the Royal Embassy of the Netherlands in Kigali. The workshop was attended by over 40 solar and biomass professionals in Rwanda, including entrepreneurs, academics, policymakers, and investors.

Find links to all presentation materials and a workshop summary on our Events page.

Friday, July 22, 2011

Researchers for a low carbon Rwanda

RENEW is not the only international research initiative looking into issues of energy access and low carbon development in Rwanda. We have came across a few related projects from around the world - have a look!

Dartmouth Humanitarian Engineering - Pico-hydro in Rwanda

Imperial College London - e.quinox energy kiosks

MIT's D-Lab - various projects

University of Oxford - Rwandan National Strategy on Climate Change and Low Carbon Development

Saturday, July 16, 2011

Recent practitioner publications in energy access

Climate Focus and the African Development Bank present an overview and guidelines for developing PoAs in Africa: Handbook for Programmes of Activities in Africa

The World Bank compiles research and new thinking for improved cookstoves: Household cookstoves, environment, health, and climate change

Alliance Magazine looks at rural electrification in Bihar, including profiles of Husk Power Systems and Greenlight Planet: June 2011 - Electrifying Bihar: the role of philanthropy and social investment

Thursday, July 14, 2011

The Netherlands and the Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves

Last week SNV and the Shell Foundation convened a round table discussion of Dutch rural energy practitioners in Den Haag to discuss the recently formed Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves. The purpose of the meeting was to provide an overview of activities currently being driven by NL parties in clean cooking, and explore the potential for future collaboration.

The discussion focused heavily on programmatic carbon finance, though other topics including the need to stimulate market demand,  and further understand the entire cooking energy value chain (including forestry management and feedstocks) were also highlighted. We saw quite a bit of overlap between the research directions in RENEW, and contributed insights gained from fieldwork in Rwanda, Kenya, and Indonesia. 

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Inclusive Business Model Generator publication launched

The "Inclusive Business Model Generator" publication, a practitioner oriented tool developed by Berlin based think tank Endeva, launched last month at the 14th International Business Forum in Berlin.

View the project website and download the publication here.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

NURU Light and RENEW in Toronto's Financial Post

Last month Rahul Barua spoke from Kigali to Toronto's Financial Post on renewable energy entrepreneurship in Rwanda, and a groundbreaking BoP venture called NURU Light. NURU delivers a micro-franchising model to address the challenge of off-grid lighting in low income markets. Village-level entrepreneurs are provided "PowerCycles" to charge LED lights; the lights are rented to village residents on a daily basis, and mimic the payments required for micro-purchases of kerosene.

Read the FP article here, and learn more about NURU's innovative approach below.


Monday, July 4, 2011

Energy access and RENEW

Energy poverty remains a critical challenge for poverty alleviation and sustainable development worldwide. Over 1.4 billion people around the world lack access to electricity today, and up to 2.7 billion people rely on the traditional use of biomass for cooking. The consequences of energy poverty are many, with significant implications for health, environment, and economic advancement. 

Renewable energy technologies (RETs) and energy efficient appliances are often suggested as promising solutions for the alleviation of energy poverty. Despite this, the potential of these technologies to provide access to basic energy services remains under-exploited. The RENEW IS-Academy is a five year, collaborative research project investigating renewable energy, energy poverty, and implications for development cooperation.