MEMO/08/380
Brussels, 8 June 2008
The International Partnership for Energy
Efficiency Cooperation (IPEEC)
At the Heiligendamm Summit in June 2007, the G-8
acknowledged an EU proposal for an international initiative on energy efficiency
tabled in March 2007, and agreed to explore, together with the International
Energy Agency, the most effective means to promote energy efficiency
internationally.
A year later, on 8 June 2008, the G8 countries, China, India, South Korea and
the European Community decided to establish the International Partnership for
Energy Efficiency Cooperation, at the Energy Ministerial meeting hosted by
Japan in the frame of the 2008 G8 Presidency, in Aomori.
The Partnership will add value to existing structures and agreements that
tackle energy efficiency, its purpose being to facilitate those actions that
yield high energy efficiency gains and improvements, and where the participating
countries see an added value for themselves and therefore choose to take action
in the areas of their interest on a voluntary basis.
The Partnership offers to the G8 and other interested countries a flexible
forum for high level policy discussion, regular strategic cooperation and
exchanges focused exclusively on energy efficiency. It will support the ongoing
work of the participating countries and relevant organisations to promote energy
efficiency. It will be a supplementary and complementary instrument to the
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change process.
The objectives of the Partnership:
- Secure a clearer picture of international action on energy efficiency;
- Enable the development of a shared and strategic view covering these
activities;
- Identify jointly the possible collaboration actions and maximising the
impact and synergies of their individual national actions.
The
Partnership will have a modular structure:
- High level energy officials will meet once a year, at the level of
Vice-Minister and/or Director General;
- Each Participant will prepare their voluntary energy efficiency action plan,
based on their national circumstances and building on existing work, i.e. no
duplication with already existing action plans is foreseen;
- Each country will choose the area of activity according to its own interests
and possibilities;
- Experts from designated institutions will participate in concrete
activities/ projects.
The Partnership will draw on the expertise and
work undertaken by international organisations and financial institutions,
research organisations, the private sector, support public – private
partnerships.
An initial Work Programme includes some concrete areas for voluntary
cooperation, such as:
- Inventory on existing national and multilateral efforts on energy efficiency
improvements,
- Sharing of best practices on programme development, public procurement,
industrial plant audits, training, public awareness efforts,
- Identifying areas of joint actions to facilitate energy efficiency
improvement, including joint work for global transition to energy efficient
lighting technologies.
The Partnership will be open to the
participation of any major economy wishing to join.
The EU has already announced an initial contribution of EUR 400.000 for
setting up an implementing structure of the Partnership. The other partners,
e.g. Japan, USA, are also taking similar commitments.