Posts Tagged ‘Technology transfer’

Millions burn lamp oil for light; U.S. nudges change with solar l.E.D. lamps

January 23rd, 2010

We saw this presentation by Energy Secretary Steven Chu in the Bella Center, in Copenhagen last month. The video shows the night sky across the earth, and the disparity between where the most energy is used, versus population centers.

Picture 1

Secretary Chu was announcing a $100 million Climate REDI (Renewables and Efficient Deployment Initative), an international climate adaptation aid package, including a technology transfer grant for poor countries whose populations still use lamp oil to light their homes. As Americans, we often take basic electricity for granted. Fuel-based lighting is inefficient, provides limited and poor quality light, and exposes users to significant health and fire hazards. Burning the hurricane lamps and wick lamps indoors causes large numbers of premature death from indoor air pollution.

To promote solar and LED programs, the Climate REDI fund is supporting the Lighting Africa initiative, TERI’s Lighting a Billion Lives program, and the U.S. Department of Energy’s Lumina Project.

Lighting_Africa_Students

The funding will help develop best practices and efficiency standards for solar-powered LED lamps, which should drive down the cost to around ten dollars each. Cutting the price is seen as a critical step toward broad implementation.

For all the complex, expensive climate solutions like carbon sequestration, there are some simple, affordable solutions that reduce pollution while providing millions of poor families across the world with the basics like lighting and water.

Intellectual Property Rights for Drugs, Clean Technologies “Very Different”

December 14th, 2009

In the development of HIV drugs, cost of Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) or patents was a huge factor. When it comes to transfer of clean technologies, IPR is a factor of course but it’s a lot more complicated.

“There’s also capacity building, using the technology, the framework [being developed by climate negotiators], trade, energy policy,” said Matthew Bateson, Managing Director of Energy and Climate for the World Business Council for Sustainable Development at a COP15 debriefing today. “It’s an integrated discussion. You can’t isolate IPR as one issue.”

One way the WBCSD is involved in COP15 is through the Expert Group on Technology Transfer. Read more about climate secretary Yvo de Boer’s call to action to the international business community in our latest post on EnvironmentalLeader.com.

Be sure to see the quick videos on Technology Transfer and Climate Finance in the Decoder section of this Web site.