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Renewable energy
partnership funding
The UK will remain the world’s leading donor to the Renewable Energy
and Energy Efficiency Partnership (REEEP), with £2.5 million in funding for
the coming year.
UK Environment Minister Phil Woolas said that the funding would form part
of a 3-year further financial commitment to REEEP by the UK. The UK has
contributed nearly £9m to the Partnership since its inception in 2003.
Mr Woolas said: "The world needs to shift to a low carbon economy,
and it needs to do it quickly. The Budget showed that we in the UK are
serious about moving to low carbon growth within our own borders – and
this funding, alongside our other financial commitments to low carbon
development, shows that we’re serious about putting in place the right
conditions to support other countries as well.
"Driven by funding and support from the UK, REEEP has become one of
the most successful partnerships of the World Sustainable Development
Dialogue. It has implemented a wide range of projects that are helping to
scale up investment in renewable energy and energy efficiency, and it has
developed a network that enables success and best practice to be quickly
replicated and scaled up so that it can make an even bigger impact.
"This is exactly the sort of catalyst for change we need if we are
to meet the immense challenges ahead."
Since its inception in 2004, REEEP has grown significantly with other
donors, including Norway and Australia, also contributing substantially to
the Partnership’s programmes and activities. REEEP’s successes have been
recognised in the last three G8 communiqués as making a significant
contribution to the deployment of low carbon technology in developing
countries.
REEEP is an international alliance of governments, NGOs and businesses
dedicated to accelerating and expanding the global market for renewable
energy and energy-efficient technologies. It focuses on reducing carbon
emissions, improving energy security and ensuring access to clean energy.
REEEP is dedicated to the development and support of legislative,
regulatory and financial frameworks that stimulate renewable energy and
energy efficiency markets. It is active globally, with a wide portfolio of
on-the-ground projects targeting the development of policy, finance and
business models that can be replicated by governments and project developers
worldwide. The partnership has more than 200 members, with more than 35
government partners including all the G7.
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