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34th ADFIAP Annual Meeting April 20 to 23, 2011 Acapulco Beach Club & Resort Hotel, Kyrenia, North Cyprus PLENARY 1 – “Visioning the Strategic Role of DFIs” Green Finance ~ Business Opportunities and Role of Financial Institutions Takashi Hongo Special Advisor and Head of Environment Finance Engineering Department Japan Bank for International Cooperation Reduction Potential World energy-related CO2 emissions savings in the 450 Scenario compared with the Current Policies Scenario, by measure Abatement 45 Gt Current Policies Scenario 40 2020 2030 2035 Efficiency 71% 49% 48% 34% 24% 24% – End-use (indirect)33% 23% 23% 3% 2% 1% 18% 21% 21% Biofuels 1% 3% 3% Nuclear 7% 9% 8% 2% 17% 19% – End-use (direct) 35 – Power plants Renewable 30 25 450 Scenario 20 2008 2015 2020 2025 2030 2035 CCS Total (Gt CO2) 3.5 15.1 20.9 Source: IEA WEO 2010 After 2020, the share of energy efficiency in total abatement declines, while more costly options like biofuels and CCS increase their share 2 Reduction Potential of Proven Technology (Commercially Viable Best Available Technology) (‘000 ton/Y ) 0 -50 -100 -150 -200 -250 -300 1.5 Billion ton CO2 saving per year > 1.3 billion ton CO2 emission a year in Japan -350 -400 Steel Industry Cement Paper & Pulp Refrigerator Developed Countries Air Conditioner Developing Countries Source: IEEJ CO2 emission reduction potential by using Japanese BAT Lighting Heat Recovery System of Cement Plant Energy saving and CO2 reduction 18,410Kwh 120,000 ton/y (China, 5000ton X2 units) AQC Boile PH Boiler Turbine / Generato Building Demineralizer building Cooling Tower Source Kawasaki4 Billion dollars (2008) Low Carbon Investment 1 200 Other Countries 1 000 Other Major Economies OECD+ 800 600 USD billion 400 Additional Investment Demand 2010-2030 3,500 200 3,000 2,500 0 2015 2020 2025 2030 Asean India China 2,000 1,500 1,000 500 0 Developing Asia Source IEA US Japan Mission of Financial Institutions Investment Projects Financial Institutions Investors Affluent society Mission of Financial Institutions Financial Institutions should support economic growth to realize affluent society under environment constraint. Balancing economy and environment is crucial. Role of Public Finance for Climate Change Mobilizing private funding is a key role Risk Mitigation Guarantee/Insurance Co-financing Improve economic return Low cost funding for co-financing Mezzanine Interest subsidies Improve investment climate Policy dialogue for incentive/regulation Information service/business matching Green Growth and Technology Cycle Green Growth R&D Investment Economic Return Commercialization Diffusion 8 “Emission” or “Reduction”? Reductions Emission from Existent facilities Emission from invested projects Emission from invested projects Access to clean energy US Japan China 2007 1990 India Electrification rate Per Capita Energy Demand 90% 80% Average electrification rate in developing countries = 72% 70% 60% 50% 40% India 300+ million 30% Asean 20% 10% 0 2 4 6 8 Toe 0% 0 Source IEA. ASEAN is 1980 and 2007 Malawi Uganda Burkina Faso DR of Congo Tanzania Mozambique Myanmar Afghanistan Kenya Ethiopia Angola Cameroon Sudan Yemen Bangladesh Nigeria Pakistan Indonesia India Others 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000 1100 1200 1300 11456 400 Population without access to electricity (million) Green and LIFE LIFE GREEN Date March 2009 March 2010 Amount USD 5 billion (2years) USD 4 billion (3years) Eligible area ・Clean Energy ・Energy Efficiency ・Water Infrastructure ・Urban transportation JBIC reviews the followings 1. Climate change policy of the host country 2. Technology to be used 3. Reduction amount by JMRV Remarks Japanese involvement is a precondition Government or financial institutions shall be borrower J-MRV ・Scaling up low carbon investment ・“simple, practical and internationally acceptable” guideline ・Following investor’s decision-making process Reduction amounts = Baseline emissions - Emissions from projects Baseline amounts = Emissions in the case without investment Option of Baseline a/ Actual emissions before investment, b/ Emissions from similar installations in operation in the country or in the region c/ Emissions from similar installations recently invested in the country or in the region Taking into account: ・investment climate such as economy, energy, technology, regulation. ・availability and reliability of data Sampling and theoretical value may be applicable http://www.jbic.go.jp/en/about/news/2010/0730-01/100730_mrv_guideline.pdf J-MRV Methodology - Rehabilitation of Coal Fired Power Plant (J-MRV002) CO2 emission amount Reductions Before Investment After Investment Taking into account of the capacity increase of the facility by the investment In case of new facility, CO2 emission amount of new facility will be compared with the national average of the same type of facility J-MRV Methodology - New Coal Fire Power Plant (J-MRV004) Principle CO2 emission Under Constraint Principle Under Regulation Reductions National Average Reductions National Average New Plant National New Plant Average National Average (Coal) Regulation, De facto standard Taking into account constraints, such as energy security, supply and investment economics Accepting and endorsing establishment of global de facto standard and regulation Reductions J-MRV Process Project Preparation Construction At Commissioning For Financial Due Diligence Retained Consultant JBIC J-MRV Advisory Committee Project Implementation Operation phase ( 1 year after commissioning) Structure of Green Credit Line J-MRV CO2 reductions Share of J-MRV Opinion J-MRV Advisory Committee Finance JBIC Bank Data CO2 reductions Data CO2 reductions Retained Consultant Finance Data (Planned and actual, Energy consumption, Power generation) Project 15 Benefit of MRV for Financial Institutions Preparation for regulatory framework Future Carbon Market Better Funding Investment on the opportunities Reputational benefit (CSR) Green Finance Alliance Voluntary Participation Sharing Good Practice MRV and Disclosure Message to Industry and Regulators New Market Mechanism MRV as International Public Goods Finance Rating Nov, 2010 Siam Reap, Cambodia Policy Industry June, 2010 Tokyo, Japan Stake Holder Carbon Market Dec, 2010 Cancun, Mexico 18 May, 2010 Cologne, Germany Public Private Financial Partnership Capacity of Our Planet Change of Lifestyle Use of Technology Better investment climate, More investment Public Sector (Improvement of investment climate) Private Sector Financial Sector (Driving force) (Push last one mile) 19