First SIDS DOCK Pacific Regional Meeting Being Held In Fiji
First SIDS DOCK Pacific Regional Meeting Being Held In Fiji
Financing climate
change adaptation high on the
agenda
Suva, Fiji, Thursday, 2
May 2013: Pacific energy and climate change
professionals will convene in Nadi, Fiji, at the Tanoa
International Hotel, for four days, beginning 6 May, to
finalize the institutional development of the Small Island
Developing States (SIDS) Sustainable Energy Initiative, SIDS
DOCK, the mechanism established by the SIDS to catalyse the
transformation of the energy sector of small islands, to
increase energy security, reduce greenhouse gas (GHG)
emissions, and generate resources for investment in
adaptation to climate change. Hon. Captain Timoci Lesi
Natuva, Minister for Public Utilities (Water and Energy),
Works and Transport, is scheduled to officially open the
meeting, along with H. E. Mr. Vince Henderson, Permanent
Representative of the Commonwealth of Dominica to the United
Nations, and Chair of the SIDS DOCK Steering
Committee.
SIDS DOCK is funded by a USD 14.5
million grant from the Government of Denmark announced in
2010, under a partnership with the United Nations
Development Programme (UNDP) and The World Bank’s Energy
Sector Management Programme (ESMAP), during climate talks in
Cancun, Mexico, to help small islands transition to low
carbon economies through development and deployment of
renewable energy resources and promotion of greater energy
efficiency and conservation. The Government of Japan joined
the SIDS DOCK partnership with a pledge of USD 15 million in
2011, during climate talks in Durban, South Africa.
In 2012, the Pacific spent in excess of USD 1.3
billion importing fuels, and has the highest petroleum fuel
dependency of any sub-region in the world. On average,
Pacific Island countries spend ten per cent of their Gross
Domestic Product (GDP) on petroleum fuel imports. This heavy
reliance on fuel imports exposes the islands to a high
degree of price volatility and takes away resources from
important development priorities. By transitioning the
energy sector to renewable energy and high energy
efficiency, fuel imports would be minimised and significant
resources would become available to address climate change
adaptation.
According to Ambassador Henderson, the
SIDS DOCK Chair, the meeting will be addressing the serious
energy issue confronting the Pacific islands. “Similar to
many SIDS, energy dependence is a major source of
vulnerability for our 13 SIDS DOCK Pacific Members, and many
remote and rural island communities have little or no access
to modern and affordable energy services,” he noted. He
continued by saying that given the Climate Change adaptation
mission the organisation has as its core function, a key
meeting agenda item will involve discussions with
participants and stakeholders on how SIDS DOCK positions
itself to address the water situation in the future,
through the development of indigenous renewable energy
resources. The Chair said that the meeting will also be
facilitating Pacific colleagues, who will be exploring ways
for the region to take forward the outcomes of the Tonga
Pacific Energy Leaders’ summit and the Pacific Energy
Summit held in March.
The SIDS DOCK Pacific
Regional Meeting is the second in a series of three SIDS
DOCK Regional Meetings aimed at finalisation and agreement
on the design of the SIDS DOCK Support Programme Platform,
its institutional development and operations, and most
importantly, the development, financing and implementation
of the SIDS DOCK Pacific Project Pipeline of 14 indicative
projects with an estimated investment opportunity of USD 40
million. A substantive part of the meeting agenda will focus
on the project pipeline.
SIDS DOCK is a one-stop
facility, established in 2009 by small islands and low lying
coastal states to deliver technical and financial support,
capacity building, and preparation of investment
opportunities to the 31 Governments that are members of the
Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS), the lobby and
negotiating voice for small islands. SIDS DOCK’s goal is
to facilitate the restructuring of the small islands’
energy mix by increasing energy efficiency by 25 per cent
(2005 baseline), by generating a minimum of 50 per cent of
electric power from renewable sources and a 20-30 per cent
decrease in conventional transportation fuel use by 2033.
SIDS DOCK requires in excess of USD 500 million, per year,
in investment financing to meet its targets by 2033.
ENDS