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DISEM Financing DISEM Financing

DISEM Financing - PowerPoint Presentation

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DISEM Financing - PPT Presentation

Salah Hannachi President of EnerSol WSEF 2012 September 4 th 1 Outline Introduction Proposal of a vision Poverty reduction DISEM mission DISEM stakeholders DISEM fund raising ID: 596735

strategy introduction co2 energy introduction strategy energy co2 amp production year solar disem tunisia 1990 research job vision good creation industrial fund

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Slide1

DISEM Financing

Salah HannachiPresident of EnerSol-WSEF 2012September 4th

1Slide2

Outline

IntroductionProposal of a vision Poverty reductionDISEM missionDISEM stakeholdersDISEM fund raising

2Slide3

Introduction

3Keys to succeful financingGood visionGood activity agenda (research, training etc..)

Good targeting of stakeholders

Good acceptance (marketing)

Renewable energy acceptance

Good acceptance

Energy strategy

Job creation (value chain)

Sustainable development

Technology access and ownership (R&D

)Slide4

Introduction

4Slide5

Introduction

Weight of Sustainable Energy in total world energy

Horizon

%77

2050

%50

2050

%

25

to %

20

2030%1002030

5Slide6

Introduction

1986 1990 1994 1998 2002 2006

Production

(millions

of barrels/day)

Cost

($/barrel)

Fossil Energy Futures

Demand

Production

6Slide7

Introduction

CO2 emissionsSlide8

Introduction

CO2 Concentration and Surface Temperature

CO2 Concentration Average Surface TemperatureSlide9

Introduction

Need for a global energy

paradigm shift

DesertificationSlide10

Introduction

10Slide11

More than 30 years of R&D in RE&EE and transportation

Production

1977

: Preparation of the Tunisian research program on Solar Energy

1982

: Installation of scientific equipment (Thermal Solar, Desalination, PV, Wind , and Biomass.

1990

: Production of the first PV cell in Tunisia and in Africa with an average yield of 11 % (14.5% in 1992)

2002

: Seminar with UNIDO on export PV industry in Tunisia

Energy transportation 1990: Superconducting More than 400 researchers and 600 doctoral students in Tunisia, Many Tunisians working on Renewable Energy in the USA, Europe, and Japan.Tunisia’s record11Slide12

Proposal of a vision Slide13

Nuclear

WindCSPPV

Poverty reduction

Private sector participation

Divisibility of scale

Produce

as you build

Proposal of a vision Slide14

Poverty reduction

Industrial

Residential

14Slide15

15

Data Center Knowledge Platform Internships Coordination

Grounding for relevance

Interface

Fund raising

DISEM Mission Slide16

16

DISEM stakeholders

Stakeholders:

Fund providers

National

Bilateral

Multilateral

Civil society

Revenue generating activities

Research and Academic institutions

Industry and R&D

Policy makers

Civil society organizations

General publicSlide17

17

DISEM

Fund Providers

Industry and Policy

Research and Training Centers

DISEM fund raisingSlide18

18

Models for DISEM

AIMS (American Institute for

Maghrebi

studies

CEMAT (Centre

d’Etudes

Maghrebines

aTunis

)

CEMA (Centre

d”Etudes Maghrebines en Algerie)TALIM (Tangier American Legation Institute for Moroccan Studies IRMC (Institut de recherche sur le Maghreb Contemporain) - TunisSlide19

Thank you for your attentionSlide20

Introduction

1986 1990 1994 1998 2002 2006

Production

(millions

of barrels/day)

Cost

($/barrel)

Fossil Energy Futures

Demand

Production

20Slide21

Introduction

CO2 emissionsSlide22

Introduction

CountryEnergy consumption per capita (Kg of oil equivalent per year)

GDP (

bn

USD)

Green

house Gas emission (mil tons CO2/year)

Algeria

1037.7

173.9

132.7

Brasil

1067.6

1612.5352.5Canada8300.71400.1544.7China1138.34344.86105.7France4518.42853.1384.0Germany4203.13652.8

805.1

India

512.4

1217.5

1510.4

Indonesia

757.4

514.9

333.7

Country

Energy consumption per capita (

Kg of oil equivalent per year)

GDP (

bn

USD)

Green

house Gas emission (mil tons CO2/year)

Italy

3127.2

2294.7

474.1

Japan

4040.4

4909.3

1293.4

Russia

4423.2

1607.8

1564.7

South Africa

2596.9

276.8

414.6

Switzerland

3718.6

488.5

41.8

Tunisia

833.3

40.2

23.1

USA

7794.8

14204.7

5732.9

CO2

emissionsSlide23

Introduction

CO2 Concentration and Surface Temperature

CO2 Concentration Average Surface TemperatureSlide24

Introduction

Need for a global energy

paradigm shift

DesertificationSlide25

Introduction

IEA/G8 Task8 reportsOCDE representation

10 year - mission:1999 – 2009

3 reports: 2003, 2007, and 2009

Conclusions :

Energy from the desert

VLSPV (Very Large Scale PV)

Water solution

Imperative of a holistic vision

Global Initiatives

DESERTEC

SSB (Sahara Solar Breeder) Plan UHVDC (Ultra High Voltage Direct Current) Superconductivity Slide26

Introduction

26Slide27

Introduction

27Slide28

Introduction

28Slide29

Introduction

29Slide30

Economies of scale

Introduction

30Slide31

Introduction

31Slide32

Introduction

Solar energy is a reliable complement to conventional energy

32Slide33

Objective

To show that Solar Energy is not only an energetic strategy but a multidimensional strategy

Job creation strategy

R&D strategy

Environment protection strategy

National energetic strategy

Industrial and commercial strategy

Disperse Power Production strategy

33Slide34

Job creation strategy

34Slide35

Job creation strategy

35Slide36

Job creation strategy

36Slide37

More than 30 years of R&D in RE&EE and transportation

Production

1977

: Preparation of the Tunisian research program on Solar Energy

1982

: Installation of scientific equipment (Thermal Solar, Desalination, PV, Wind , and Biomass.

1990

: Production of the first PV cell in Tunisia and in Africa with an average yield of 11 % (14.5% in 1992)

2002

: Seminar with UNIDO on export PV industry in Tunisia

Energy transportation 1990: Superconducting More than 400 researchers and 600 doctoral students in Tunisia, Many Tunisians working on Renewable Energy in the USA, Europe, and Japan. R&D strategy37Slide38

38

R&D strategySlide39

National energy independence strategy

39Slide40

Environment protection strategy

CountryEnergy consumption per capita (Kg of oil equivalent per year)

GDP (

bn

USD)

Green

house Gas emission (mil tons CO2/year)

Algeria

1037.7

173.9

132.7

Brasil

1067.6

1612.5352.5Canada8300.71400.1544.7China1138.34344.86105.7France4518.42853.1384.0Germany4203.13652.8

805.1

India

512.4

1217.5

1510.4

Indonesia

757.4

514.9

333.7

Country

Energy consumption per capita (

Kg of oil equivalent per year)

GDP (

bn

USD)

Green

house Gas emission (mil tons CO2/year)

Italy

3127.2

2294.7

474.1

Japan

4040.4

4909.3

1293.4

Russia

4423.2

1607.8

1564.7

South Africa

2596.9

276.8

414.6

Switzerland

3718.6

488.5

41.8

Tunisia

833.3

40.2

23.1

USA

7794.8

14204.7

5732.9

CO2

emissionsSlide41

Industrial and commercial strategy

National framework: Prosol 1&2 Prosol

elec

Tunisian Solar Plan (PST)

EUMENA framework

ELMED

MEDGRIG

African framework:

Many poor African countries having already the grid parity Slide42

Industrial and commercial strategy

Industrial

Residential

42Slide43

Disperse Power Production strategy

Off grid / On grid stations Rural Development Fight against poverty Stand alone power stations

Smart grids