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www.blacktiemagazine.com
ENERGYNOW SDG7
ACTION FORUM
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Gerard Mc Keon,
William Tien, Ryan Ban Tran, Aurora Aquino,
Richard J. Casinelli and Peter Mei
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EnergyNow SDG7 Action Forum
Credit: Black Tie International Magazine/Gerard Mc Keon
and Aurora Aquino
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Gordon Winston,
Aurora Aquino, Barbara Winston, Ryan Ban Tran
and Tristan Zhang |
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EnergyNow SDG7
Action Forum |
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Integrating
Distributed Renewable Energy Technologies for Sustainable
Development in Rural and Remote Areas. Organizers:
UNDP & SEforALL |
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Sustainable
Energy and Water: Supporting Women's Empowerment
and Economic DevelopmentOrganizers: Sustainable Water
and Energy Solutions Network |
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Ensuring Energy-efficient and
Climate-friendly Cooling for All
Organizers: IFC, UNEP& SEforALL |
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The Many Facets of Energy
Transition: From India to the World
Organizers: SEforALL & CEEW |
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Gerard Mc Keon
and William Tien |
September 27,
2024 |
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Unlocking
Investments in Affordable and Clean Energy. Organizers:
11VEN |
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Challenges and
Solutions to Unlock the Green Hydrogen Market.
Organizers: Green Hydrogen Compact SEforALL & HIF
Global |
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Unlocking
Investments in Affordable and Clean Energy. Organizers:
11VEN
Dr.
William Tien, Founder/CEO, Carbonis, speaking |
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Dr.
William Tien, Founder/CEO, Carbonis, speaking |
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De-risking for
Renewable Energy Investments: Cracking the Code
Organizers: UNDP |
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Strengthening
Local Value Chains for Energy Transition Solutions in the
Global South. Organizers: SEforALL, Institute for
Transportation Studies,
Swaniti & Carnegie Endowment for International Peace |
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Advancing SDG7
in Central America and the Dominican Republic:
The SICA Regional Energy Compacts. Organizers: SICA &
ECLAC |
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Takaoa Minoru
Team Leader on Energy at the Division for Sustainable
Development Goals, Department of Economic and Social
Affairs, United Nations
Looking
forward to seeing you all again next year! |
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The ENERGYNOW SDG7 Action Forum brought
together leaders and experts from governments, business, and
civil society to drive momentum and mobilize action towards
the achievement of
SDG 7 (affordable and clean energy).
The Forum convened during the High-level Week of the
79th session of the UN General Assembly (UNGA).
The third edition of the annual Forum will
showcase Energy Compacts, share best practices and success
stories, and strengthen multistakeholder dialogue in support
of accelerated SDG 7 action. Participants will explore ways
to accelerate just, inclusive, and equitable energy
transition towards net zero, including through tripling
renewables, doubling energy efficiency, increasing
investments, improving data and indicators,
and enhancing synergies.
The UN-Energy Secretariat at the
UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs (DESA)
convened the event.
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With only six years left to achieve the
Sustainable Development
Goals, the promise of the 2030 Agenda for
Sustainable Development
is in peril. The fragility of past
hard-earned progress has been
compounded by the climate crisis, spreading
conflict, and a
constrained global economic outlook. As these
global crises have
also impacted energy issues, progress on SDG7
- ensuring access to
affordable, reliable, sustainable, and modern
energy for all - has
slowed. But SDG7 can and must still be
achieved. Energy is an
essential ingredient for getting the world on
track towards meeting
the SDGs and the objectives of the Paris
Agreement on climate
change.
The ENERGYNOW SDG7 Action Forum 2024 will
support these efforts
by providing a platform to connect all
stakeholder groups, including
decision makers and practitioners, in support
of driving momentum
and mobilizing action. The Forum will
showcase Energy Compacts,
present success stories and best practices,
and strengthen
multistakeholder dialogue in support of
accelerated SDG7 action. It
will explore concrete ways to accelerate
just, inclusive, and equitable
energy transition towards net zero, building
on the outcomes of
UNFCCC COP28.
The Forum will take place at the margins of
the United Nations
General Assembly High-level Week 2024. At the
General Debate, the
Summit of the Future and other high-level
meetings and events,
Heads of State and Government and other world
leaders will gather
to explore solutions to the intertwined
global challenges to advance
peace, security, and sustainable development.
The Forum will build
on the Global Stocktaking marking the
completion of the UN Decade
for Sustainable Energy for All, 2014-2024, to
further accelerate the
implementation of SDG7, including discussions
on the global energy
agenda towards 2030 and beyond, while also
leveraging the
outcomes of the 5th Global Climate and SDGs
Synergies Conference
and the upcoming UNFCCC COP29 and the updated
Nationally
Determined Contributions (NDCs) which are due
next year
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First-ever EnergyNow SDG7 Action
Forum
drives momentum on clean energy
for all
$46 billion in initial investments
has brought electricity and clean
cooking to millions and boosted
renewables, Energy Compacts report
in first year New York,
Aiming to drive momentum on clean,
affordable energy for all despite a
global energy crisis, the first-ever
EnergyNow SDG7 Action Forum is
bringing together leaders and
experts from governments,
businesses, youth and other
stakeholders .
Key players will share their latest
actions and solutions for energy
access and a just, inclusive energy
transition, including updates on
Energy Compact commitments totalling
over $600 billion, made in
connection with the UN High-level
Dialogue on Energy one year ago.
They will also discuss the impact of
the energy crisis and opportunities
created by new technologies and
trends.
The Forum is being organized by UN-Energy, a consortium of nearly thirty
United Nations agencies and
international organizations who
collaborate on various aspects of
energy, with the aim of catalysing
achievement of Sustainable
Development Goal 7 (clean,
affordable energy for all) by 2030
and net-zero emissions by 2050,
considered crucial for tackling the
climate emergency.
ENERGY COMPACTS SHOW RESULTS DESPITE
GLOBAL CRISIS
The first Energy Compact Progress
Report, prepared by UN-Energy and
being officially released at the
Forum, shows that in the year since
they were launched, Energy Compact
commitments have generated US$46
billion in investment, and provided
enhanced electricity access to 6
million people and improved access
to clean cooking
for 14 million people.
Based on data submitted by over 94 Energy Compact proponents, 88 GW of
renewable energy capacity has also
been installed and 2,450 GWh of
energy saved through energy
efficiency measures in the 2021-
2022 reporting period.
This progress was made even though,
according to over 70 per cent of the
Energy Compact respondents, the
repercussions of the conflict in
Ukraine have affected, or are
expected to affect, the pace and
scale of their energy actions.
Although the current energy crisis
has seen an increase in the use of
fossil fuels to address energy
supply deficits, with coal use
rising 7 per cent in the European
Union in 2022 according to the
International Energy Agency, the
report states that the Compact
community is optimistic that this
will be short-lived and that the
long-term effect of the energy
crisis will be renewed focus towards
a green transition where energy
systems are more localized and
resilient to international shocks,
and consist of a much greater share
of
renewable energy.
PUTTING INTO ACTION THE GLOBAL
ROADMAP
The Compacts, with specific targets
and timelines, are intended to be a
key vehicle for translating into
concrete actions and partnerships
the Global Roadmap for Accelerated
SDG7 Action that resulted from the
2021 High-level Dialogue on Energy.
Over 185 voluntary Energy Compact
commitments have been registered,
and additional commitments can be
put forward by Member States,
regional/local governments, private
sector companies, NGOs or other
organizations.
An Energy Compact Action Network, a multi-stakeholder mechanism led by
UN-Energy, was launched earlier in
2022 to bring together the Energy
Compact community, identifying the
opportunities for various partners
to work together and support each
other in achieving the commitments
they have made.
The progress made on the Energy
Compacts has also contributed to a
number of other Sustainable
Development Goals, most notably to
SDG13, with 400 million tons of CO2e
emissions being averted; to SDG6,
with an additional 300,000 people
accessing clean, safe drinking
water; and to SDG4, with 70,700 new
students attending schools through
Compact-related actions in the last
year.
MOBILIZING THE UN SYSTEM AND
PARTNERS
The EnergyNow SDG7 Action Forum will
also present highlights of
UN-Energy’s achievements since it
launched its own Plan of Action
earlier this year. The ambitious
Plan of Action aims to catalyse
energy access for 500 million
people, clean cooking for 1 billion
and a doubling of renewables, all by
2025. These targets are based on the
timeline set out in the Global
Roadmap for what is needed to reach
SDG 7 by 2030 and net-zero emissions
by 2050 in support of the Paris
Agreement on climate change.
In 2021, more than 2.4 million rural
households in 33 countries benefited
from clean, affordable and
sustainable energy as the result of
efforts by UN-Energy members.
Notably, lending from UN-Energy
member organizations represents a
quarter of global investment in
mini-grids, a key technology for
bringing electricity to rural areas.
From 2017-2021, UN-Energy member
organizations have committed over
US$ 8.4 billion of financing for
renewable energy and energy
efficiency projects in developing
countries while also helping to
mobilize private capital for the
sector. More than 48GW of variable
renewable energy were added to grids
to help communities, businesses, and
economies thrive. Moreover, efforts
to increase energy efficiency led to
more than 90 GWh of savings in 2020
alone.
Globally 733 million people still
have no access to electricity, and
2.4 billion people still cook using
fuels like wood or charcoal that are
detrimental to their health and the
environment, according to the latest
figures issued in June 2022.
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