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Energy and climate - financing the energy shift to stop climate change

Investing in true solutions for the challenge of climate change – solid renewable energy projects and energy efficiency schemes – is in countries' interest, in the environment's interest, and it is in the EU's economic interest.


Carbon dioxide concentrations transported around Earth by atmospheric circulation. (NASA/JPL)

Climate change is one of the most serious risks our world is facing, including the economic, social and environmental disruptions it would create. Phasing out fossil fuel based energy production by shifting to renewable energy and increasing energy efficiency are core solutions to the issue.

Such vital, radical change involves a revolution in how the world’s economies are organised and fuelled. This cannot happen without proper stimulation.

International financial institutions can and should make use of their financial leverage and clout to provide incentives for renewable energy and energy efficiency investments.

But they often fail to do so.

With a focus on EU Structural and Cohesion Funds, the European Investment Bank, and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, Bankwatch challenges these institutions to finance more than a few green showcase projects, but to support solutions for decarbonising the energy sector.

Energy efficiency and innovation

There is enormous potential to reduce energy consumption, particularly in central and eastern Europe:

While the technical solutions are readily available (thermal insulation of buildings, efficient appliances, energy improvements in industrial production), energy saving measures are economically (and politically) less attractive and funding is hard to come by.

It is international financial institutions and governments who should step in to promote energy efficiency as the first priority in energy policy and funding.

Renewable energy sources and smart grids

Promoting renewable energy promises to bring energy security, create new jobs and break the spell of our fossil fuel addiction.

Nevertheless, international financial institutions still invest billions in unsustainable energy production and do too little to facilitate renewable energy:

  • the lending of both the European Bank for Reconstruction (pdf) and the European Investment Bank (pdf) has not only lacked clear commitment to green energy, but has even seen a growth in fossil fuel projects in recent years
  • EU funding (pdf) still is far away from fulfilling its potential to inspire a change in EU member states' energy policy

To increase renewable energy production and its distribution and regulation through smart electricity grids, financial support as well as a new set of policies will be necessary.

Bankwatch calls on the IFIs, the EU and its member states to respond to this necessity and eventually help consumers to gain more control over the energy system and their energy consumption.

 


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Croatian plans to more than double the capacity of the Plomin coal power plant would have resulted in increased carbon-emissions for several decades. The project’s profitability was questionable and the plans were facing local opposition and conflicting regional legislation.

EBRD
EIB
Energy & climate

Ugljevik III near Bijeljina in the Republika Srpska part of Bosnia and Herzegovina is planned to consist of 2x300 MW units which would take lignite from the open cast mines at Delici, Peljave-Tobut, Baljak and part of Ugljevik-Istok. An existing unit of 300 MW at the site, operating since 1985, sits alongside the half-built Ugljevik II whose construction was never finished, and which is now the subject of a long-running dispute with Slovenia.

Chinese investors
Energy & climate

The Kolubara B thermal power plant site is situated near Kalenic village, 60 km south-west of Belgrade, at the northern side of the Tamnava Open Cast Mine. The decision to build the 2x350 MW plant was taken in 1983 and construction started in 1988. Construction progressed slowly until 1992, when work was suspended due to sanctions against Serbia. At this stage about 40 percent of the facility had already been constructed, partly with the assistance of a World Bank loan.

World Bank Group
Energy & climate

Linked to a slew of controversies, the Kolubara lignite mine in Serbia will receive loans from European public banks. Corruption allegations, pollution at local level, irregularities in resettlement of local populations and not to forget a climate damaging approach to energy investments should be reason enough to find alternatives to lignite mining.

EBRD
Energy & climate
Social & economic impacts

While a mountain community will have to be forced to resettle for this mega-project, the opaque ownership and weak taxation mean that benefits for Georgia are highly doubtful.

World Bank Group
Energy & climate
Social & economic impacts
Other harmful projects

With huge amounts of unexploited natural resources (gold, copper, coal and more) the Mongolian economy is estimated to grow massively in the years to come. But will it also benefit the people in Mongolia? Our work shows how mining operations lead to pollution and displacement for local herders and exacerbate water scarcity issues.

EBRD
Energy & climate
Social & economic impacts
Other harmful projects

In its drive for 'energy security', the EU is looking to its eastern neighbour for cheap energy. But using a series of high-voltage transmission lines to import dirty energy supplies like nuclear and coal power from Ukraine will not make the EU safer, and it will lock both into an unstable and environmentally unsound energy mix.

EBRD
EIB
Energy & climate

ArcelorMittal's enormous steel mill in southern Ukraine received a loan from the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) in 2006 that helped the company increase productivity and expand its market position but didn't do much to address the pollution caused by the mill.

EBRD
Energy & climate
Social & economic impacts
Mining