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6th BRICS Summit emphasized social inclusion & sustainable development

  1.  mechanism aims at contributing significantly to dev. of humanity & establishing a more equitable & fair world
  2. Inclusive growth: sustainable solutions. The 6th  Summit emphasized social inclusion & sustainable development
 UN Women’s Office for India, Bhutan, Maldives & Sri Lanka

​Press Release

Media inquiries:In New York, Oisika Chakrabarti, +1 646 781-4522;
E-mail: oisika.chakrabarti[at]unwomen.org
In Addis Ababa, Monika Bihlmaier, +251941615108,
E-mail: monika.bihlmaier[at]unwomen.org
Transformative Financing Will End Gender Inequality by 2030UN Women calls for dedicated resources to deliver on commitments
New York/Addis Ababa — On the eve of the Third International Conference on Financing for Development, UN Women is calling for transformative financing to end gender inequality by 2030. High ambition, backed by stepped-up action to make the right investments, puts that goal within reach for all women and girls.
The Financing for Development conference, to be held in Addis Ababa from 13-16 July 2015, will bring together high-level officials from across the world to agree on a set of far-reaching commitments to finance sustainable development, including those linked to official development assistance, trade, debt, taxation and technology, among other issues. The meeting provides a critical opportunity to ensure the centrality of gender equality in the mobilization and allocation of all sources of financing, public and private, domestic and international.
Studies show women everywhere need dedicated and consistent investment and resources. To implement gender equality objectives of the post-2015 development agenda, political will and commitment to unprecedented levels of financing – in scale, scope, and quality— and from all sources, are needed.
“We have an enormous opportunity,” says Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, UN Women Executive Director. “As we look towards the new development agenda, it is clear that its sustainability will be strongest, and most enduring when it is based on equal, financially resilient, and inclusive communities. We have to act now to vastly increase financing, from all sources and at all levels, in line with women’s rights. Now is the time for governments to put gender equality and women’s empowerment at the heart of all discussions, all agreements.”
Financing for Development is considered one of three global events in 2015 that could transform the course of development over the next 15 years, and as the first in the series, is expected to set the tone for the other two. They include a September summit to agree on a post-2015 sustainable development agenda and a December summit with an anticipated new deal on climate change.
For decades, chronic underinvestment in women’s empowerment has hampered progress on women’s rights and gender equality. Conducted by UN Women, a recent review of progresson implementation of the landmark 1995 Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action, endorsed at the Fourth World Conference on Women, found advances towards gender equality have been slow and inconsistent, often attributable to financing gaps. In some countries, these gaps are as high as 90 per cent.
Earlier in 2015, this financing shortfall was recognized by UN Member States at the UN Commission on the Status of Women, resulting in a Political Declaration pledging to close the gap. The Addis conference, therefore, can be the first major step to move this agenda forward.
Beyond increasing the amount of financing, including through official development assistance and domestic resources such as taxation, countries need to adopt public policies that address the root causes and consequences of gender inequality and discrimination in all areas of life. In this regard, women must participate fully in decision-making at all levels, and action should be taken to mainstream gender in national planning and budgeting processes.
Furthermore, the private sector must uphold the human rights of women and be held accountable for contributing to progress, such as by empowering women in the workplace. Women’s organizations, integral to the long struggle for equality and having built a cohesive, inclusive movement for gender equality, must also receive significantly more funding to perform their advocacy and mobilization roles.
During the Addis Conference UN Women will join UN Member States to launch the Addis Ababa Action Plan on Transformative Financing for Gender Equality and Women’s Empowerment. This Plan aims to outline key policy and financing priorities to translate the pledges in the Addis Ababa Accord and Action Agenda into prioritized, well-resourced actions for meeting new and existing commitments to gender equality and women’s empowerment to in the post-2015 sustainable development agenda.
With the World Bank Group President, Jim Yong Kim, and the UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, UN Women will host a side event called “Financing for Gender Equality—Results and Good Practices.” It will engage ministers, civil society and business representatives to champion high-impact financing success stories. UN Women is also supporting an event hosted by the Ethiopian government on African women’s role in the sustainable development goals.
Fostering the active role of civil society in the financing for development processes, UN Women has been collaborating with women's groups and civil society organizations from the global South, so that their priorities can be reflected in the outcomes of the Addis Conference. Before the conference opens, UN Women is supporting the Women’s Forum and the Civil Society Forum to mobilize advocates to continually press for action on gender equality. UN Women’s participation in official proceedings and the Business Forum will stress key messages such as the urgent need to close the funding gap to make post-2015 gender goal a reality.
More information on UN Women events and participation at the Conference, click here.

• Learn more: http://www.unwomen.org/en/news/in-focus/financing-for-gender-equality
• Follow the conversation on Twitter @UN_Women, #FFgenderequality, #FFD3
• To attend or cover UN Women events at the Financing for Development Conference, media must be accredited. Media Accreditation details available at:http://www.un.org/esa/ffd/ffd3/news-media/media-accreditation.html
• Interviews with senior officials are available, please contact media contacts listed.
UN Women is the UN organization dedicated to gender equality and the empowerment of women. A global champion for women and girls, UN Women was established to accelerate progress on meeting their needs worldwide. For more information, visit www.unwomen.org. UN Women, 220 East 42nd Street, New York, NY 10017, New York. Tel: +1 646 781-4400. Fax: +1 646 781-4496.
 
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Wednesday, July 8, 2015

Contact: Gaelle Gourmelon, ggourmelon@worldwatch.org , (+1) 202-745-8092, ext. 510
        

New report unveils pathway to affordable, sustainable energy in Dominican Republicenglish

        
An efficient, renewable-based energy system could save the island nation
up to US$25 billion over the next 15 years

Executive Director of Climate Change and Viceminister of Energy Ernesto Vilalta, Minister of Energy and Mines Antonio Isa Conde, Worldwatch Climate and Energy Director Alexander Ochs, and Secretary of State and Vice-President of the National Council for Climate Change Omar Ramírez
Executive Director of Climate Change and Viceminister of Energy Ernesto Vilalta, Minister of Energy and Mines Antonio Isa Conde, Worldwatch Climate and Energy Director Alexander Ochs, and Secretary of State and Vice-President of the National Council for Climate Change Omar Ramírez
Washington, D.C.---- Yesterday, at the Energy Ministry of the Dominican Republic in Santo Domingo, the Worldwatch Institute presented analyses and recommendations to government officials and energy stakeholders to support a transition to a sustainable energy system in the country. 

Minister for Energy and Mines Dr. Antonio Isa Conde, Vice Minister of Energy Ernesto Vilalta, Secretary of State and Vice-President of the National Council for Climate Change Omar Ramirez, and other high-ranking governmental officials met with Worldwatch's Alexander Ochs, Director of Climate and Energy at Worldwatch and the director of the study, to receive the report, Harnessing the Dominican Republic's Sustainable Energy Resources. Representatives from the Ministry and stakeholders in the energy sector were then briefed on the social, economic, and environmental benefits of transitioning to an efficient, renewable-based energy system (www.worldwatch.org/bookstore/publication/roadmapdr). 

According to the report, transitioning to an electricity system powered 85 percent by renewables can decrease the average cost of electricity in the Dominican Republic by 40 percent by 2030 compared to 2010. Such an ambitious pathway to renewable energy would improve the safety and reliability of the island nation's energy supply. It also would create up to 12,500 additional jobs and reduce greenhouse gas emissions in the Dominican electricity sector to a mere 3 million tons annually, all while making power generation in the country more resilient to the impacts of climate change and reducing local air and water pollution.

The Dominican Republic depends on fossil fuel imports for 86 percent of its electricity needs, a reliance that brings enormous economic and environmental vulnerabilities and costs. The country spends up to a tenth of its gross domestic product on fossil fuel imports and spent US$1 billion on subsidies in 2011 to keep electricity rates more affordable. Transmission and distribution losses remain very high, at 32 percent, leading to significant financial losses for the Dominican power system. Heavy reliance on fossil fuels also results in high local pollution and healthcare costs and contributes to global climate change.

"Transitioning to a sustainable system is in the country's best long-term interest," says Ochs "This Roadmap provides decision makers and stakeholders in the Dominican Republic with the technical, socioeconomic, financial, and policy analysis needed to guide the country's further transition to an electricity system that works."

"The study demonstrates that an alternative pathway exists, one that is socially, economically, and environmentally sustainable,"says Ochs. "Together with our partners on the island, we have proven that a power system built on the efficient distribution and competent use of the country's vast available renewable resources is the only smart way forward for the Dominican Republic."

Improving power generation efficiency and reducing grid losses---- both of which are far short of international standards---- are a first step to reducing electricity prices for consumers, the report finds. The lowest-cost ways to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions in the country include installing efficient lighting controls in new commercial buildings, switching from incandescent light bulbs to LEDs and investing in more-efficient electronics in the commercial and residential sectors, and replacing fuel oil plants with natural gas-fired plants. Even with improvements in efficiency, however, new power capacity will still be needed to meet the country's needs.

If grid strengthening measures are implemented, renewable energy can reliably meet up to 85 percent of the Dominican Republic's electricity demand while still lowering energy costs. Of the possible renewable installed capacity, the majority (85 percent) could be met with solar (4,708 megawatts) and wind (4,205 megawatts) by 2030, according to the most ambitious scenario presented in the report. The rest would come from small hydropower and bagasse.

Renewable energy technologies are already fully competitive with conventional power solutions, even if so-called "externalities" are not accounted for, according to Worldwatch's electricity cost modeling. Moreover, "the social and economic case for renewables becomes even stronger once the very real air and water pollution costs, as well as related health costs of fossil fuel generation, are included," says Ochs. "Add climate change to the equation, and the rationale behind clean modern energy technologies becomes an economic no-brainer."

Distributed generation---- producing power where it is consumed, such as using rooftop solar systems---- can greatly reduce grid losses. It is also more resilient than centralized fossil fuel generation to climate change impacts, such as hurricanes, inland flooding, or droughts. Renewable energy sources---- particularly distributed systems---- are also the only feasible long-term solution to provide affordable electricity to the 4 percent of Dominicans who live in remote areas without any access to the power grid.

The report provides detailed geographic and temporal analysis of the country's strong solar and wind resources. It demonstrates how a good weather forecasting system and a reliable, modernized grid allow for both reliable production and system protection in the case of extreme weather events.

The largest hurdle is the upfront costs of such a system change. Building up enough renewable energy capacity to power 85 percent of Dominican electricity would require investments of around US$78 billion. However, the switch to renewables is much more affordable than any scenario that relies on conventional energy sources, including installing, operating, and fueling fossil fuel-based power plants. Total savings to the country in the highest renewable scenario (85 percent) is US$25 billion by 2030. This would free up significant public money over the next 15 years to spend on other pressing social and economic concerns.

The Roadmap makes concrete suggestions for building both financial and human capacities to make the sustainable energy pathway a reality. The suggestions aim to improve the investment environment for public and private as well as domestic and international financing.

To speed the energy transition, the report recommends that the Dominican Republic make renewable energy an overarching development priority, rallying key governmental and non-governmental actors behind a clean, independent, affordable, and reliable energy vision. Creating a new Ministry of Energy and Mines in July 2013 was a strong first step toward mainstreaming the country's myriad energy-related resources. The Roadmap outlines additional concrete finance and policy recommendations to strengthen the investment environment for renewables and to allow the energy sector to follow the best path forward based on conclusions from the report's modeling and analysis.

"A paradigm shift is happening in the Dominican Republic, and our Roadmap will further accelerate it," says Ochs. "The country's government, private industry, and civil society actors have come to see the important role of energy reform in reducing electricity costs, bolstering the national economy, creating social opportunity, and contributing to a healthier environment."

"The country is now at a crucial point where it must implement targeted measures in order to achieve the full benefits of a sustainable energy system for generations to come."
Available publicly in English and Spanish on July 8 at www.worldwatch.org/bookstore/publication/roadmapdr, the Worldwatch Institute report Harnessing the Dominican Republic's Sustainable Energy Resources presents the technical, socioeconomic, financial, and policy assessments needed to transition to an energy system in the Dominican Republic that is socially, economically, and environmentally sustainable.

--END--

Report Highlights:
  • Renewables in the Dominican Republic could reduce the total cost of electricity generation and can save the country up to US$25 billion by 2030.
  • Transitioning the country to an electricity system powered 85 percent by renewables could decrease the average cost of electricity by 40 percent by 2030 in comparison to 2010.
  • The renewable energy transition could create up to 12,500 additional jobs and reduce greenhouse gas emissions in the electricity sector to a mere 3 million tons annually.
  • The country's solar energy resource is particularly strong and is far superior to that of Germany, the global leader in installed solar photovoltaic capacity.
  • Just 15-20 medium-sized wind farms (60 megawatts each) could provide half of the Dominican Republic's current power demand.
  • Over the past five years, US$644 million has been invested in the country's renewables sector. More recently, however, investment has declined, with only some US$1.2 million in green micro-loans distributed to borrowers in 2013.
  • The Roadmap recommends reducing the number of vice-ministries in the new Ministry of Energy and Mines from six to just three: Administration, Energy, and Mining.
ABOUT THE SUSTAINABLE ENERGY ROADMAPS: By collaborating with local stakeholders, the Worldwatch Institute has produced Sustainable Energy Roadmaps for several countries and world regions. Combining technical analysis, socio-economic modeling, investment analysis, and policy assessment, the Roadmaps result in concrete implementation plans that empower nations to reduce local pollution, greenhouse gases, long-term energy costs, and dependence on fossil fuel imports, and to create new social and economic opportunity while supporting environmental integrity.

ABOUT THE WORLDWATCH INSTITUTE: The Worldwatch Institute is an independent research organization based in Washington, D.C. that works on energy, resource, and environmental issues. Worldwatch delivers the insights and ideas that empower decision makers to createan environmentally sustainable society that meets human needs. For more information, visit www.worldwatch.org.

Third International Conference on Financing for Development in Addis Ababa from 13-16 July to launch a renewed and strengthened global partnership for financing people-centred sustainable development.
To raise the curtain on the Conference, Mr. Wu Hongbo, Under-Secretary-General of the Department of Economic and Social Affairs (DESA), held a press briefing in New York on 7 July, emphasizing that the outcome of the Conference will be an important milestone on the road toward the adoption of a new sustainable development agenda in September and a universal climate change agreement at the Paris Climate Conference in December.
Following on this, we are seeking your support in communicating key messages on the Conference to the larger public that your media influences. The Conference web site can be found at: http://www.un.org/esa/ffd/ffd3/

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