4.5 Article

Clean energy financing at Asian Development Bank

Journal

ENERGY FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
Volume 15, Issue 2, Pages 195-199

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.esd.2011.04.005

Keywords

Climate change mitigation; Financial mechanism; Clean energy policy; Multilateral development bank; Asian Development Bank

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Presenting data from Asian Development Bank (ADB), this paper attempts to examine the bank's energy for development portfolio within a 12-year period beginning in 1997, the year when the Kyoto Protocol was adopted. This paper seeks to understand the implications of this particular assistance to climate change mitigation in terms of filling the gaps in providing resources for energy-related projects. With more than US $12 billion development assistance to support the energy sector in the last 12 years, ADB was able to mobilize substantial support from 2005 onwards. The paper also shows that annual energy assistance was virtually stagnant and even lacking before 2005. Evidence suggests that some efforts are being made to fill the resource gap and to mitigate climate change especially in 2008. While analysis suggests that there has been a substantial increase in financing to lower greenhouse gas emitting energy projects, the shift tends to be fragile. ADB still favors financing large profitable projects and concentrates its portfolio mostly to selected regions and countries. For ADB to provide significant contribution to climate change mitigation, several challenges remain to be met in the future from increasing funding to meet demands for increasing number of renewable and efficiency projects to expanding assistance especially in underserved countries and regions. (C) 2011 International Energy Initiative. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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