Difference between revisions of "Energising Development (EnDev)"

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The Energising Development Partnership (EnDev) is a joint '''impact-oriented global programme of Germany, the Netherlands, Norway, Australia, United Kingdom and Switzerland''', with additional co-funding from Ireland and the European Union. The respective governmental institutions are the German Federal Ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development ([http://www.bmz.de/en/index.html BMZ]), the Directorate-General for International Cooperation of the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs ([http://www.government.nl/ministries/bz#ref-minbuza MFA-NL]), the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs ([http://www.regjeringen.no/en.html?id=4 MFA NO]), the Australian Government Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade ([http://www.dfat.gov.au/ DFAT]), the UK Department for International Development ([https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations/department-for-international-development DFID]), and the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation ([http://www.sdc.admin.ch/ SDC]). The programme cooperates with governments, NGOs and the private sector in several '''partner countries in Africa, Latin America and Asia'''. Its dynamic organisational structure allows for additional donors to join.<br/>
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The Energising Development Partnership (EnDev) is a joint '''impact-oriented global programme of Germany, the Netherlands, Norway, Australia, United Kingdom and Switzerland''', with additional co-funding from Ireland and the European Union. The respective governmental institutions are the German Federal Ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development ([http://www.bmz.de/en/index.html BMZ]), the Directorate-General for International Cooperation of the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs ([http://www.government.nl/ministries/bz MFA-NL]), the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs ([http://www.regjeringen.no/en.html?id=4 MFA NO]), the Australian Government Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade ([http://www.dfat.gov.au/ DFAT]), the UK Department for International Development ([https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations/department-for-international-development DFID]), and the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation ([http://www.sdc.admin.ch/ SDC]). The programme cooperates with governments, NGOs and the private sector in several '''partner countries in Africa, Latin America and Asia'''. Its dynamic organisational structure allows for additional donors to join.<br/>
  
 
The implementation of the Energising Development programme started in 2005. It had the initial objective of facilitating '''sustainable access to modern energy services''' to 3.1 million people in developing countries. The objective was surpassed with a total number of 5.1 million people. Consequently,'''the programme has been scaled up several times''': in total, EUR 263.26 million have now been allocated to support access to energy for the poor. The target was increased to 14.5 million people that will have access to sustainable energy services by 2018.<br/>
 
The implementation of the Energising Development programme started in 2005. It had the initial objective of facilitating '''sustainable access to modern energy services''' to 3.1 million people in developing countries. The objective was surpassed with a total number of 5.1 million people. Consequently,'''the programme has been scaled up several times''': in total, EUR 263.26 million have now been allocated to support access to energy for the poor. The target was increased to 14.5 million people that will have access to sustainable energy services by 2018.<br/>

Revision as of 19:57, 12 September 2014


Key Facts

Website: Endev.info

Contact: EnDev@giz.de

More Information: EnDev Report on Impacts

The Energising Development Partnership (EnDev) is a joint impact-oriented global programme of Germany, the Netherlands, Norway, Australia, United Kingdom and Switzerland, with additional co-funding from Ireland and the European Union. The respective governmental institutions are the German Federal Ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ), the Directorate-General for International Cooperation of the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA-NL), the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA NO), the Australian Government Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT), the UK Department for International Development (DFID), and the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC). The programme cooperates with governments, NGOs and the private sector in several partner countries in Africa, Latin America and Asia. Its dynamic organisational structure allows for additional donors to join.

The implementation of the Energising Development programme started in 2005. It had the initial objective of facilitating sustainable access to modern energy services to 3.1 million people in developing countries. The objective was surpassed with a total number of 5.1 million people. Consequently,the programme has been scaled up several times: in total, EUR 263.26 million have now been allocated to support access to energy for the poor. The target was increased to 14.5 million people that will have access to sustainable energy services by 2018.

By December 2013, 12.26 million people have gained access either to electricity or improved cooking technologies in households. In addition, 15,700 social institutions and 28,300 small and medium-sized enterprises have benefited from sustainable access to modern energy services. EnDev also has trained more than 32,000 stove builders, craftsmen, vendors and solar technicians.

The Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH acts as the principal agency for implementing the partnership. Implementation is conducted in close cooperation with the Netherlands Enterprise Agency (RVO) and with other international partner organisations such as the Netherlands Development Organisation (SNV).



Scope

Currently, EnDev is active in 24 low- and middle-income countries in Asia, Latin America and Africa. EnDev is a global programme, hence funds are not committed on the basis of bilateral governmental negotiations; rather,eligibility for funding is performance-based.

EnDev contributes to the goals of theSustainable Energy for All (SE4All) initiative as well as to the MDGs. Enhancing access to energy is a precondition for achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). In that respect, EnDev does not aim for simply connecting households and institutions from a technological point of view. In fact, EnDev intends to maximise the impact of energy access by taking into account energy use and target group demand.

EnDev supports the provision of:

  • Energy for household applications: provision of modern energy for lighting and small electrical appliances (e.g. information and communication technologies)
  • Energy for cooking: provision of efficient and clean cooking, baking and space heating devices
  • Energy for social infrastructure (schools, hospitals and community centres): provision of energy for the use of electrical as well as cooking and heating devices
  • Energy for small and medium-sized enterprises, cooperatives and craftsmen: provision of modern energy services for productive use, for income generation.

The technologies and services predominantly promoted in EnDev’s country programmes include (PV) photovoltaic energy, grid densification, micro-hydropower, Cookstoves – What is it all about? energy-efficient cooking stoves and biogas.


Continent Country Solar Power Hydro Power Biogas Grid Improved Cooking
Africa Benin grid extension and densification improved cookstoves (ICS)
Burkina Faso improved cookstoves (ICS)
Burundi solar lanterns (PicoPV), solar home systems (SHS), solar powered pumps (PV pumps) improved cookstoves (ICS)
Ethiopia photovoltaic (PV) systems pico and micro hydro power (PHP/MHP) improved cookstoves (ICS)
Ghana grid extension
Kenya solar lanterns (PicoPV) improved cookstoves (ICS)
Liberia solar lanterns (PicoPV) minigrids improved cookstoves (ICS)
Madagascar



improved cookstoves (ICS)
Mali photovoltaic (PV) systems, battery charging stations (BCS)
Malawi



improved cookstoves (ICS)
Mozambique photovoltaic (PV) systems pico and micro hydro power (PHP/MHP) grid densification improved cookstoves (ICS)
Rwanda photovoltaic (PV) systems micro hydro power (MHP) biogas digesters mini-grids
Senegal photovoltaic (PV) systems grid extension improved cookstoves (ICS)
Tanzania solar lanterns (pico PV)


improved cookstoves (ICS)
Uganda solar home systems (SHS) micro hydro power (MHP) grid extension improved cookstoves (ICS)

Asia Bangladesch solar home systems (SHS), small solar home systems (SSHS) improved cookstoves (ICS)
Cambodia

biogas digesters

Indonesia photovoltaic (PV) systems micro hydro power (MHP) biogas digesters
Nepal micro hydro power (MHP) grid extension
Vietnam biogas digesters

Latin America Bolivia solar home systems (SHS), solar lanterns (PicoPV) micro hydro power (MHP) grid extension improved cookstoves (ICS)
Honduras photovoltaic (PV) systems micro hydro power (MHP) grid extension improved cookstoves (ICS)
Nicaragua solar home systems (SHS) micro hydro power (MHP) grid extension improved cookstoves (ICS)
Peru solar home systems (SHS), solar heaters grid extension improved cookstoves (ICS)



EnDev Criteria

The selection process for measures to be supported by EnDev combines competition with needs assessment and focal areas, as previously defined by its donors. The competition approach allows for a fast scaling-up of successful activities and flexible reallocation of funds between countries according to performance. Performance is being measured in terms of the number of people provided with sustainable access to modern energy services per allocated euro. Long-term sustainability is a core criterion for activities to be supported within the EnDev framework. Special attention is paid to the broader developmental impacts of the energy activities implemented.


Monitoring and Impact Assessment

EnDev is working withresults-based management. Baseline studies are conducted before project intervention and systematic impact studies after households, social infrastructure or small and medium-sized enterprises gained access to a form of modern energy. Experiences with the programme show that competition between different projects and technologies stimulates local contributions and cost efficiency. Further, EnDev ensures additionality of its interventions. An activity is only considered eligible if it provides access to modern energy services that would not materialise without the intervention of EnDev.

Activities clearly focus on those energy services and resources which are reliable, affordable, socially acceptable, and environmentally sound. EnDev initiatives should supplement on-going activities. Hence, the core criteria for activities to be supported under EnDev relate to both quantitative output and long-term sustainability.

The figures reported are only those which can be fully attributed to EnDev and include the following adjustment factors (rationalising the initially measured number of beneficiaries):

  • the sustainability adjustment factor, accounting for the fact that the access to modern energy technologies is un-fortunately not sustainable in all cases;
  • the windfall gain factor is an adjustment for the fact that some households would have gained access to modern energy services even without EnDev support, and
  • the double energy factor accounting for the fact that some households and social institutions gaining access had already benefitted from the same type of modern energy service (as, by definition, any beneficiary will only be counted once: upon its first connection to such service).


Learning and Innovation

It is of utmost importance to find solutions appropriate to a specific local context. All EnDev activities have the same objective: development through access to energy.

As a global programme it is able to create and share knowledge between activities worldwide. The cultural diversity represented in the programme is a key for innovation. Sharing experience and learning together is the basis for success.


Further Information


References