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New initiative boosts Renewable Energy Technology Transfer between China and Ghana and Zambia with UNDP and Danish Development Assistance as catalysts

Milestone Agreement signed for South-South Cooperation

BEIJING, Aug. 19, 2014 /PRNewswire/ -- A milestone partnership was forged today in Beijing between China, Denmark, Ghana, Zambia and UNDP with the signing of a project agreement for Renewable Energy Technology Transfer.

This project is one of the first examples of triangular South-South cooperation between China and Africa with support from a donor. Its objective is to ensure that Chinese renewable energy technologies are optimally responding to priorities and needs in Ghana and Zambia, and critical skills are also transferred and developed to make the technologies actually work on the ground. This approach will have a tremendous impact on increasing access to energy for the rural poor in the two countries, and for other developing countries interested in such cooperation with China in the future.

The project is part of the UNDP-China agreement for Strengthened Partnership signed in 2010 to promote South-South cooperation through innovative programmes. "UNDP is pleased to embark on this cooperation and is committed to making projects more impactful and more sustainable by providing 'software' support with the transfer of renewable energy technologies, rather than just relying on the traditional hardware of equipment or infrastructure," said Xu Haoliang, UN Assistant Secretary-General, UNDP Director of the Regional Bureau of Asia and Pacific

The Government of Denmark provided funding for the initial formulation of the project and a contribution of 29.25 million DKK, equivalent of US$ 5.4 million, to UNDP for its implementation in Ghana and Zambia. This implementation will be led by the Government of the two countries with the Ministry of Sciences and Technology as the Chinese counterpart institution, and support from the UNDP offices in Beijing, Accra and Lusaka.

 "It seems quite obvious for Denmark to enter in an innovative partnership like this. Denmark has a serious track record in setting high targets for use of renewable energy and meeting these goals by delivering commercially viable solutions to these challenges," said Friis Arne Petersen, Ambassador of Denmark to China. "Together with Denmark's involvement as a long term partner in development aid for Africa and Denmark's increasing bilateral co-operation with China in a broad sense make it natural for us as a donor to engage in a project like this," he added.

The project will help with achieving the objective of Sustainable Energy for All (SE4ALL) of the UN Secretary- General Ban Ki-Moon by increasing access to energy through off-grid and community-based electrification. Support will not be in the form of hardware transfer but instead will focus on creating conditions required to make adoption of renewable energy technologies more effective, removing barriers and strengthening local capacities to respond to national priorities and meet local needs.  

The ceremony for the signing of the agreement held at the UN compound in Beijing was attended by Mr. Xu Haoliang, Director of UNDP Regional Bureau for Asia and the Pacific, Mr. Friis Arne Petersen, Ambassador of Denmark, Mr. Anani Demuyakor, Ambassador of Ghana, Ms. Getrude Kasuba Mwape, Ambassador of Zambia, Mr. Guo Risheng, Director-General of representative of China's Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST), Mr. Alain Noudehou, UN Resident Coordinator and UNDP Resident Representative and Mr. Christophe Bahuet, Country Director of UNDP China.

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Source: United Nations Development Programme
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