The document provides information about a masterclass on new energy realities, the energy transition, and leadership over change. It includes:
- Background on the founder of Energy For One World, Adriaan Kamp, and his consulting practice on global change, energy architecture, and the UN SDGs.
- An outline of the masterclass modules which will cover the new energy realities from 2015-2023, organizing for success in driving change to scale, and leadership over innovation and change.
- Context on global trends from the 1970s to today in population, economic growth, climate change, and the limits highlighted in the 1972 Club of Rome report.
- References to key climate events and initiatives including COP conferences
1) The document discusses the challenges of achieving a sustainable energy transition to meet future energy needs and address climate change.
2) It notes that global energy use is expected to double by 2050 with the world population growing to 10 billion, requiring major investments and changes to energy systems.
3) Achieving wide-ranging goals from COP26 on clean technology and reducing emissions will require unprecedented international cooperation between countries, along with support from private sector investments and new infrastructure development.
EFOW Draft Notes at Interview Club of Amsterdam: Energy FutureEnergy for One World
This document outlines an interview/dialogue on energy, energy transition, and innovation. It discusses:
1) The geopolitics of energy including war, inequality of access, and corporate power dynamics.
2) Climate change impacts exceeding planetary boundaries and the failure of agreements like the Paris Accords to transform systems.
3) The need for new leadership and values in energy focused on service rather than profit.
4) Possible interventions around markets, sectors, governance, and trade to redesign energy systems and make progress on transition and development goals.
The dialogue aims to provide perspective on present challenges and opportunities, and inspire action to build bridges and redesign energy systems to achieve a sustainable future by 2050.
The document summarizes the impact of the war in Ukraine on energy and sustainability. It discusses how the war has caused a "great decoupling" as countries move away from Russian energy imports. This is leading countries to extend coal use, import more LNG, implement energy savings, and accelerate the expansion of renewables. It also notes rising commodity prices and challenges to global food and financial systems. The document argues that energy transitions will be disruptive but also presents opportunities to build more sustainable and inclusive energy-economic systems. Overall it examines the wide-ranging effects of the war and calls for responsible leadership to manage challenges and advance a decarbonized future.
EFOW brief remarks : Beyond COP28, Halfway 2030 and on Our Way to 2024_ (Con...Energy for One World
The document provides an overview and analysis of key developments from COP28 and the state of energy and climate issues halfway to 2030. It discusses 5 key urgencies, including the direction of human development and planetary boundaries. It summarizes the outcomes of COP28 in Dubai, including the establishment of a loss and damage fund and agreement on the need to transition away from fossil fuels. However, it notes criticism that the initial negotiated text was weak on ambition and that the final consensus text was strengthened. The document examines different interpretations and reactions to COP28's outcomes.
EFOW Brief Remarks : Beyond COP28, Halfway 2030 and on Our Way to 2024 (Conce...Energy for One World
The document provides an overview and analysis of key developments from COP28, the 2023 UN climate summit in Dubai. It discusses the negotiations around "loss and damage" funding and language around transitioning away from fossil fuels. It notes disagreement over the initial proposed text on the global stocktake and the amended consensus text. It shares initial reactions from groups like The Elders and the IEF, with differing views on whether COP28 achieved enough on increasing climate ambition and supporting vulnerable countries.
1. The document discusses the impacts of the war in Ukraine on energy, sustainability, and the UN Sustainable Development Goals.
2. It addresses issues like energy prices, supply uncertainties, global value chain decoupling, inflation, and rising poverty.
3. It also examines responses to the war such as expanding renewables and fossil fuel imports as well as accelerating the energy transition.
The document provides information about a masterclass on new energy realities, the energy transition, and leadership over change. It includes:
- Background on the founder of Energy For One World, Adriaan Kamp, and his consulting practice on global change, energy architecture, and the UN SDGs.
- An outline of the masterclass modules which will cover the new energy realities from 2015-2023, organizing for success in driving change to scale, and leadership over innovation and change.
- Context on global trends from the 1970s to today in population, economic growth, climate change, and the limits highlighted in the 1972 Club of Rome report.
- References to key climate events and initiatives including COP conferences
1) The document discusses the challenges of achieving a sustainable energy transition to meet future energy needs and address climate change.
2) It notes that global energy use is expected to double by 2050 with the world population growing to 10 billion, requiring major investments and changes to energy systems.
3) Achieving wide-ranging goals from COP26 on clean technology and reducing emissions will require unprecedented international cooperation between countries, along with support from private sector investments and new infrastructure development.
EFOW Draft Notes at Interview Club of Amsterdam: Energy FutureEnergy for One World
This document outlines an interview/dialogue on energy, energy transition, and innovation. It discusses:
1) The geopolitics of energy including war, inequality of access, and corporate power dynamics.
2) Climate change impacts exceeding planetary boundaries and the failure of agreements like the Paris Accords to transform systems.
3) The need for new leadership and values in energy focused on service rather than profit.
4) Possible interventions around markets, sectors, governance, and trade to redesign energy systems and make progress on transition and development goals.
The dialogue aims to provide perspective on present challenges and opportunities, and inspire action to build bridges and redesign energy systems to achieve a sustainable future by 2050.
The document summarizes the impact of the war in Ukraine on energy and sustainability. It discusses how the war has caused a "great decoupling" as countries move away from Russian energy imports. This is leading countries to extend coal use, import more LNG, implement energy savings, and accelerate the expansion of renewables. It also notes rising commodity prices and challenges to global food and financial systems. The document argues that energy transitions will be disruptive but also presents opportunities to build more sustainable and inclusive energy-economic systems. Overall it examines the wide-ranging effects of the war and calls for responsible leadership to manage challenges and advance a decarbonized future.
EFOW brief remarks : Beyond COP28, Halfway 2030 and on Our Way to 2024_ (Con...Energy for One World
The document provides an overview and analysis of key developments from COP28 and the state of energy and climate issues halfway to 2030. It discusses 5 key urgencies, including the direction of human development and planetary boundaries. It summarizes the outcomes of COP28 in Dubai, including the establishment of a loss and damage fund and agreement on the need to transition away from fossil fuels. However, it notes criticism that the initial negotiated text was weak on ambition and that the final consensus text was strengthened. The document examines different interpretations and reactions to COP28's outcomes.
EFOW Brief Remarks : Beyond COP28, Halfway 2030 and on Our Way to 2024 (Conce...Energy for One World
The document provides an overview and analysis of key developments from COP28, the 2023 UN climate summit in Dubai. It discusses the negotiations around "loss and damage" funding and language around transitioning away from fossil fuels. It notes disagreement over the initial proposed text on the global stocktake and the amended consensus text. It shares initial reactions from groups like The Elders and the IEF, with differing views on whether COP28 achieved enough on increasing climate ambition and supporting vulnerable countries.
1. The document discusses the impacts of the war in Ukraine on energy, sustainability, and the UN Sustainable Development Goals.
2. It addresses issues like energy prices, supply uncertainties, global value chain decoupling, inflation, and rising poverty.
3. It also examines responses to the war such as expanding renewables and fossil fuel imports as well as accelerating the energy transition.
1. The document discusses the outcomes of COP26 and initiatives to address climate change through reducing deforestation, methane emissions, and investments in clean technology and renewable energy.
2. It also analyzes the increasing diversity in global energy systems and the need for an energy transition that avoids disruption and transforms energy economies and infrastructure to be sustainable, inclusive, and without concerns.
3. Finally, the document calls for responsible leadership and international cooperation, like between the US and China, to successfully implement the energy transitions needed to meet climate and sustainability goals.
This document discusses the outcomes of COP26 and the global energy transition needed to meet climate goals and UN Sustainable Development Goals. It notes some initiatives and commitments that came out of COP26, including commitments to reduce deforestation, methane emissions, and investments in clean technologies. It argues that the energy transition is a process, not a destination, and will require diversity across geographies, technologies, skills, and cultures. It also notes that the transition will involve societal disruption and transformation. It emphasizes that the energy transition must balance environmental and economic needs through inclusive and sustainable new energy system architectures.
EFOW Brief Remarks : Beyond COP28, Halfway 2030 and on Our Way to 2024_ (Dra...Energy for One World
The document provides an overview of key issues discussed at COP28 in Dubai including:
1. COP28 resulted in the historic agreement to transition away from fossil fuels, but some criticize that the actions agreed to are too little, too late.
2. Reactions to the COP28 outcome were mixed, with some like The Elders welcoming the signal to end the fossil fuel era, while others like Power Shift Africa saying the transition is not adequately funded or fair.
3. The COP28 president, who is also the CEO of Abu Dhabi's state oil company, said he will continue record investment in oil and gas production despite coordinating the global deal to transition away from fossil fuels.
This document provides an agenda and overview for 2024 regarding energy transition, climate action, and achieving UN sustainability goals. It identifies key drivers of change like human development patterns, energy resources, and humanity's relationship with nature. It summarizes the outcomes of COP28, including the establishment of a loss and damage fund, and renewed commitments to transition away from fossil fuels. The document aims to support positive change by focusing on opportunities to shape a sustainable future through 2024 and beyond.
The document outlines an agenda called AGENDA2024 that focuses on key drivers of change, realities, and opportunities for making a good future regarding energy transition, the Paris Agreement, and UN Sustainable Development Goals. It discusses the importance of 2024 as a year to test global institutions and energy systems. It identifies areas like human development, energy sources, geopolitics, and our relationship with nature as drivers of change and highlights opportunities to transition current systems to more sustainable ones to work towards a good future.
This document provides an overview of global developments in energy and sustainability from 2015-2017. Some key points covered include the Paris Climate Agreement in 2015, progress and challenges in implementing the UN's Sustainable Development Goals, and shifts in energy markets and technologies driven by climate policies, renewable energy growth, and other factors. It discusses perspectives from organizations like the IEA, UN, and others on trajectories for renewable energy adoption and decarbonization. The document frames 2018 and beyond as an opportunity to further scale up efforts across sectors and levels to accelerate the transition to a more sustainable energy and economic system globally.
The document provides an agenda and discussion points for the year 2024 regarding energy transition, climate action, and achieving sustainability goals. It summarizes the key topics as focusing on the drivers of change, realities, and opportunities for making progress on energy issues, the Paris Agreement, and UN Sustainable Development Goals. The year 2024 is seen as important for testing global institutions and energy systems to determine if the trajectory toward more sustainable systems can be achieved. The document outlines several areas for discussion including human development trends, energy resource availability, environmental impacts, outcomes of COP28, and opportunities to make progress on energy and climate issues through 2024.
EFOW Year 2018 Presentation:Global Change, New Energy Realities & UN SDGsEnergy for One World
The document discusses opportunities for leadership in energy architecture, sustainability, and the UN Sustainable Development Goals. It covers topics such as global changes between 2015-2018 including climate change, the Paris Agreement, and the UN 2030 agenda. It discusses organizing efforts across different levels and sectors. It provides examples of energy sector opportunities and new possibilities in renewable energy, smart cities, mobility, and finance.
EDI Lecture: Energy Architecture & UN SDGs: Leading Innovation and ChangeEnergy for One World
This document summarizes a presentation given by Adriaan Kamp on opportunities in energy transition and leadership. The presentation covered:
1) Recent global changes including climate change agreements and sustainable development goals from 2015-2018
2) Organizing for success through innovation and change across different levels from UN to communities
3) Opportunities, skills and personal leadership needed for energy transition. Examples of regional energy developments and companies changing strategies for a lower carbon future were discussed.
EFOW Year 2018 Presentation:Global Change, New Energy Realities & UN SDGsEnergy for One World
This document provides an overview of global changes between 2015-2018 related to energy, climate change, and sustainable development. It discusses organizing efforts across different levels including UN, regional blocks, countries, cities, communities, companies, and coalitions. It also covers opportunities in areas like renewable energy, energy efficiency, new business models, smart cities, and electric vehicles. Finally, it discusses the need for new leadership to manage complex change and multi-stakeholder partnerships required for transitioning to a sustainable future.
This document summarizes the energy consumption and carbon emissions of several major countries. It finds that countries attempting to "catch up" economically, like China, India, and Indonesia, have seen sharply increasing energy use and carbon emissions driven by rapid industrialization and economic growth relying heavily on fossil fuels. Mature economies like South Korea show a slowing of emissions increases as they develop cleaner energy sources. The document analyzes data using Kaya's model and finds a close correlation between GDP, energy use, and carbon emissions in these countries. It concludes some developing nations will resist emission cuts until reaching maturity due to their priority of economic development over environmental goals.
EFOW Presentation- 2019 Nyenrode Corporate Governance InstituteEnergy for One World
The document provides an overview of a presentation on energy transition and strategic choices for boards given by Adriaan Kamp. It discusses:
1. Global changes in climate, energy, and sustainability goals from 2015-2019, including the Paris Agreement and UN SDGs.
2. How these changes relate to strategic choices for company boards regarding energy transition.
3. An open dialogue session to discuss opportunities for next steps in energy transition.
Brief Remarks EFOW on COP26 - draft opening conversation lines (Sample)Energy for One World
1. The speaker found COP26 came at an important time as climate warnings become more severe, but the formal negotiations fell short of meeting the Paris Agreement goals.
2. Some positive developments happened outside the formal negotiations, like pledges from businesses and new initiatives between countries. John Kerry and China also announced a new declaration with substantive actions.
3. The energy transition has been ongoing for 10 years but drivers are now more focused on climate change. Opportunities exist but there are also challenges to scaling up investment and implementation globally and making energy systems free of concerns.
1. The speaker found COP26 came at an important time as climate warnings become more severe, but the formal negotiations fell short of meeting the Paris Agreement goals.
2. Some positive developments happened outside the formal negotiations, like pledges from businesses and new initiatives between countries. John Kerry and China also announced a new declaration with substantive actions.
3. The energy transition has been ongoing for 10 years but drivers are now more focused on climate change. Opportunities exist but there is a lack of coordination between governments, businesses, and finance to scale up investments needed to meet climate goals. China appears to be building capabilities to become a clean energy superpower.
1. The document discusses the outcomes of COP26 and initiatives to address climate change through reducing deforestation, methane emissions, and investments in clean technology and renewable energy.
2. It also analyzes the increasing diversity in global energy systems and the need for an energy transition that avoids disruption and transforms energy economies and infrastructure to be sustainable, inclusive, and without concerns.
3. Finally, the document calls for responsible leadership and international cooperation, like between the US and China, to successfully implement the energy transitions needed to meet climate and sustainability goals.
This document discusses the outcomes of COP26 and the global energy transition needed to meet climate goals and UN Sustainable Development Goals. It notes some initiatives and commitments that came out of COP26, including commitments to reduce deforestation, methane emissions, and investments in clean technologies. It argues that the energy transition is a process, not a destination, and will require diversity across geographies, technologies, skills, and cultures. It also notes that the transition will involve societal disruption and transformation. It emphasizes that the energy transition must balance environmental and economic needs through inclusive and sustainable new energy system architectures.
EFOW Brief Remarks : Beyond COP28, Halfway 2030 and on Our Way to 2024_ (Dra...Energy for One World
The document provides an overview of key issues discussed at COP28 in Dubai including:
1. COP28 resulted in the historic agreement to transition away from fossil fuels, but some criticize that the actions agreed to are too little, too late.
2. Reactions to the COP28 outcome were mixed, with some like The Elders welcoming the signal to end the fossil fuel era, while others like Power Shift Africa saying the transition is not adequately funded or fair.
3. The COP28 president, who is also the CEO of Abu Dhabi's state oil company, said he will continue record investment in oil and gas production despite coordinating the global deal to transition away from fossil fuels.
This document provides an agenda and overview for 2024 regarding energy transition, climate action, and achieving UN sustainability goals. It identifies key drivers of change like human development patterns, energy resources, and humanity's relationship with nature. It summarizes the outcomes of COP28, including the establishment of a loss and damage fund, and renewed commitments to transition away from fossil fuels. The document aims to support positive change by focusing on opportunities to shape a sustainable future through 2024 and beyond.
The document outlines an agenda called AGENDA2024 that focuses on key drivers of change, realities, and opportunities for making a good future regarding energy transition, the Paris Agreement, and UN Sustainable Development Goals. It discusses the importance of 2024 as a year to test global institutions and energy systems. It identifies areas like human development, energy sources, geopolitics, and our relationship with nature as drivers of change and highlights opportunities to transition current systems to more sustainable ones to work towards a good future.
This document provides an overview of global developments in energy and sustainability from 2015-2017. Some key points covered include the Paris Climate Agreement in 2015, progress and challenges in implementing the UN's Sustainable Development Goals, and shifts in energy markets and technologies driven by climate policies, renewable energy growth, and other factors. It discusses perspectives from organizations like the IEA, UN, and others on trajectories for renewable energy adoption and decarbonization. The document frames 2018 and beyond as an opportunity to further scale up efforts across sectors and levels to accelerate the transition to a more sustainable energy and economic system globally.
The document provides an agenda and discussion points for the year 2024 regarding energy transition, climate action, and achieving sustainability goals. It summarizes the key topics as focusing on the drivers of change, realities, and opportunities for making progress on energy issues, the Paris Agreement, and UN Sustainable Development Goals. The year 2024 is seen as important for testing global institutions and energy systems to determine if the trajectory toward more sustainable systems can be achieved. The document outlines several areas for discussion including human development trends, energy resource availability, environmental impacts, outcomes of COP28, and opportunities to make progress on energy and climate issues through 2024.
EFOW Year 2018 Presentation:Global Change, New Energy Realities & UN SDGsEnergy for One World
The document discusses opportunities for leadership in energy architecture, sustainability, and the UN Sustainable Development Goals. It covers topics such as global changes between 2015-2018 including climate change, the Paris Agreement, and the UN 2030 agenda. It discusses organizing efforts across different levels and sectors. It provides examples of energy sector opportunities and new possibilities in renewable energy, smart cities, mobility, and finance.
EDI Lecture: Energy Architecture & UN SDGs: Leading Innovation and ChangeEnergy for One World
This document summarizes a presentation given by Adriaan Kamp on opportunities in energy transition and leadership. The presentation covered:
1) Recent global changes including climate change agreements and sustainable development goals from 2015-2018
2) Organizing for success through innovation and change across different levels from UN to communities
3) Opportunities, skills and personal leadership needed for energy transition. Examples of regional energy developments and companies changing strategies for a lower carbon future were discussed.
EFOW Year 2018 Presentation:Global Change, New Energy Realities & UN SDGsEnergy for One World
This document provides an overview of global changes between 2015-2018 related to energy, climate change, and sustainable development. It discusses organizing efforts across different levels including UN, regional blocks, countries, cities, communities, companies, and coalitions. It also covers opportunities in areas like renewable energy, energy efficiency, new business models, smart cities, and electric vehicles. Finally, it discusses the need for new leadership to manage complex change and multi-stakeholder partnerships required for transitioning to a sustainable future.
This document summarizes the energy consumption and carbon emissions of several major countries. It finds that countries attempting to "catch up" economically, like China, India, and Indonesia, have seen sharply increasing energy use and carbon emissions driven by rapid industrialization and economic growth relying heavily on fossil fuels. Mature economies like South Korea show a slowing of emissions increases as they develop cleaner energy sources. The document analyzes data using Kaya's model and finds a close correlation between GDP, energy use, and carbon emissions in these countries. It concludes some developing nations will resist emission cuts until reaching maturity due to their priority of economic development over environmental goals.
EFOW Presentation- 2019 Nyenrode Corporate Governance InstituteEnergy for One World
The document provides an overview of a presentation on energy transition and strategic choices for boards given by Adriaan Kamp. It discusses:
1. Global changes in climate, energy, and sustainability goals from 2015-2019, including the Paris Agreement and UN SDGs.
2. How these changes relate to strategic choices for company boards regarding energy transition.
3. An open dialogue session to discuss opportunities for next steps in energy transition.
Brief Remarks EFOW on COP26 - draft opening conversation lines (Sample)Energy for One World
1. The speaker found COP26 came at an important time as climate warnings become more severe, but the formal negotiations fell short of meeting the Paris Agreement goals.
2. Some positive developments happened outside the formal negotiations, like pledges from businesses and new initiatives between countries. John Kerry and China also announced a new declaration with substantive actions.
3. The energy transition has been ongoing for 10 years but drivers are now more focused on climate change. Opportunities exist but there are also challenges to scaling up investment and implementation globally and making energy systems free of concerns.
1. The speaker found COP26 came at an important time as climate warnings become more severe, but the formal negotiations fell short of meeting the Paris Agreement goals.
2. Some positive developments happened outside the formal negotiations, like pledges from businesses and new initiatives between countries. John Kerry and China also announced a new declaration with substantive actions.
3. The energy transition has been ongoing for 10 years but drivers are now more focused on climate change. Opportunities exist but there is a lack of coordination between governments, businesses, and finance to scale up investments needed to meet climate goals. China appears to be building capabilities to become a clean energy superpower.
Similar to EDI Executive Education Master Class- 15thMay 2024 (updated) (2) (20)
The Big Oil Reality Check report finds that the climate pledges and plans of 8 international oil and gas companies fail to align with international agreements to phase out fossil fuels and to limit global temperature rise to 1.5ºC.
Publication May 2021
IEA publication, May 2024
Critical minerals, which are essential for a range of clean energy technologies, have risen up the policy agenda in recent years due to increasing demand, volatile price movements, supply chain bottlenecks and geopolitical concerns. The dynamic nature of the market necessitates greater transparency and reliable information to facilitate informed decision-making, as underscored by the request from Group of Seven (G7) ministers for the IEA to produce medium- and long-term outlooks for critical minerals.
The Global Critical Minerals Outlook 2024 follows the IEA’s inaugural review of the market last year. It provides a snapshot of industry developments in 2023 and early 2024 and offers medium- and long-term outlooks for the demand and supply of key energy transition minerals based on the latest technology and policy trends.
The report also assesses key risks to the reliability, sustainability and diversity of critical mineral supply chains and analyses the consequences for policy and industry stakeholders. It will be accompanied by an updated version of the Critical Minerals Data Explorer, an interactive online tool that allows users to explore the latest IEA projections.
Science Publication
Global projections of macroeconomic climate-change damages typically consider
impacts from average annual and national temperatures over long time horizons1–6
.
Here we use recent empirical fndings from more than 1,600 regions worldwide over
the past 40 years to project sub-national damages from temperature and precipitation,
including daily variability and extremes7,8
. Using an empirical approach that provides
a robust lower bound on the persistence of impacts on economic growth, we fnd that
the world economy is committed to an income reduction of 19% within the next
26 years independent of future emission choices (relative to a baseline without
climate impacts, likely range of 11–29% accounting for physical climate and empirical
uncertainty). These damages already outweigh the mitigation costs required to limit
global warming to 2 °C by sixfold over this near-term time frame and thereafter diverge
strongly dependent on emission choices. Committed damages arise predominantly
through changes in average temperature, but accounting for further climatic
components raises estimates by approximately 50% and leads to stronger regional
heterogeneity. Committed losses are projected for all regions except those at very
high latitudes, at which reductions in temperature variability bring benefts. The
largest losses are committed at lower latitudes in regions with lower cumulative
historical emissions and lower present-day income.
Science Publication: The atlas of unburnable oil for supply-side climate poli...Energy for One World
Nature Communication, Publication 2024
To limit the increase in global mean temperature to 1.5 °C, CO2 emissions must
be drastically reduced. Accordingly, approximately 97%, 81%, and 71% of
existing coal and conventional gas and oil resources, respectively, need to
remain unburned. This article develops an integrated spatial assessment
model based on estimates and locations of conventional oil resources and
socio-environmental criteria to construct a global atlas of unburnable oil. The
results show that biodiversity hotspots, richness centres of endemic species,
natural protected areas, urban areas, and the territories of Indigenous Peoples
in voluntary isolation coincide with 609 gigabarrels (Gbbl) of conventional oil
resources. Since 1524 Gbbl of conventional oil resources are required to be left
untapped in order to keep global warming under 1.5 °C, all of the above-
mentioned socio-environmentally sensitive areas can be kept entirely off-
limits to oil extraction. The model provides spatial guidelines to select
unburnable fossil fuels resources while enhancing collateral socio-
environmental benefits.
This document is a report from the Inter-agency Task Force on Financing for Development summarizing the current state of financing for sustainable development. It finds financing gaps have increased to $4 trillion annually for developing countries. Progress on reducing poverty and hunger has stalled or reversed in some cases. Many developing economies face high debt burdens, exacerbating financing challenges. The report calls for $500 billion in additional annual investments in sustainable development and climate action through measures like development bank reforms, debt relief for vulnerable countries, and international financial system reforms to better support developing countries in achieving the SDGs. It will help inform discussions at the upcoming Fourth International Conference on Financing for Development.
This report analyzes global trends in corporate sustainability policies and practices. It finds that nearly 10,000 listed companies representing $85 trillion in market capitalization disclosed sustainability information in 2022. Most large companies report greenhouse gas emissions and set reduction targets, though target baselines are often missing. The report also examines board oversight of sustainability issues, executive compensation linked to ESG metrics, corporate lobbying activities, and stakeholder engagement practices. It concludes by recommending flexibility in disclosure standards and increased assurance of sustainability reports.
European Court of Human Rights: Judgment Verein KlimaSeniorinnen Schweiz and ...Energy for One World
The European Court of Human Rights found Switzerland in violation of its obligations under the European Convention on Human Rights to protect citizens from climate change. The Court ruled that Article 8, the right to respect for private and family life, includes protection from serious adverse effects of climate change. However, it found the individual applicants did not have standing, while the applicant association representing over 2,000 older women did have standing. The Court also found Switzerland violated Article 6 by failing to properly consider the association's complaints in domestic courts. Overall, Switzerland failed to implement sufficient legislation and measures to meet its climate change targets in line with its international commitments.
Combined Illegal, Unregulated and Unreported (IUU) Vessel List.Christina Parmionova
The best available, up-to-date information on all fishing and related vessels that appear on the illegal, unregulated, and unreported (IUU) fishing vessel lists published by Regional Fisheries Management Organisations (RFMOs) and related organisations. The aim of the site is to improve the effectiveness of the original IUU lists as a tool for a wide variety of stakeholders to better understand and combat illegal fishing and broader fisheries crime.
To date, the following regional organisations maintain or share lists of vessels that have been found to carry out or support IUU fishing within their own or adjacent convention areas and/or species of competence:
Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR)
Commission for the Conservation of Southern Bluefin Tuna (CCSBT)
General Fisheries Commission for the Mediterranean (GFCM)
Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission (IATTC)
International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT)
Indian Ocean Tuna Commission (IOTC)
Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organisation (NAFO)
North East Atlantic Fisheries Commission (NEAFC)
North Pacific Fisheries Commission (NPFC)
South East Atlantic Fisheries Organisation (SEAFO)
South Pacific Regional Fisheries Management Organisation (SPRFMO)
Southern Indian Ocean Fisheries Agreement (SIOFA)
Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (WCPFC)
The Combined IUU Fishing Vessel List merges all these sources into one list that provides a single reference point to identify whether a vessel is currently IUU listed. Vessels that have been IUU listed in the past and subsequently delisted (for example because of a change in ownership, or because the vessel is no longer in service) are also retained on the site, so that the site contains a full historic record of IUU listed fishing vessels.
Unlike the IUU lists published on individual RFMO websites, which may update vessel details infrequently or not at all, the Combined IUU Fishing Vessel List is kept up to date with the best available information regarding changes to vessel identity, flag state, ownership, location, and operations.
Donate to charity during this holiday seasonSERUDS INDIA
For people who have money and are philanthropic, there are infinite opportunities to gift a needy person or child a Merry Christmas. Even if you are living on a shoestring budget, you will be surprised at how much you can do.
Donate Us
https://serudsindia.org/how-to-donate-to-charity-during-this-holiday-season/
#charityforchildren, #donateforchildren, #donateclothesforchildren, #donatebooksforchildren, #donatetoysforchildren, #sponsorforchildren, #sponsorclothesforchildren, #sponsorbooksforchildren, #sponsortoysforchildren, #seruds, #kurnool
United Nations World Oceans Day 2024; June 8th " Awaken new dephts".Christina Parmionova
The program will expand our perspectives and appreciation for our blue planet, build new foundations for our relationship to the ocean, and ignite a wave of action toward necessary change.
UN WOD 2024 will take us on a journey of discovery through the ocean's vastness, tapping into the wisdom and expertise of global policy-makers, scientists, managers, thought leaders, and artists to awaken new depths of understanding, compassion, collaboration and commitment for the ocean and all it sustains. The program will expand our perspectives and appreciation for our blue planet, build new foundations for our relationship to the ocean, and ignite a wave of action toward necessary change.
AHMR is an interdisciplinary peer-reviewed online journal created to encourage and facilitate the study of all aspects (socio-economic, political, legislative and developmental) of Human Mobility in Africa. Through the publication of original research, policy discussions and evidence research papers AHMR provides a comprehensive forum devoted exclusively to the analysis of contemporaneous trends, migration patterns and some of the most important migration-related issues.
Preliminary findings _OECD field visits to ten regions in the TSI EU mining r...OECDregions
Preliminary findings from OECD field visits for the project: Enhancing EU Mining Regional Ecosystems to Support the Green Transition and Secure Mineral Raw Materials Supply.
RFP for Reno's Community Assistance CenterThis Is Reno
Property appraisals completed in May for downtown Reno’s Community Assistance and Triage Centers (CAC) reveal that repairing the buildings to bring them back into service would cost an estimated $10.1 million—nearly four times the amount previously reported by city staff.
EDI Executive Education Master Class- 15thMay 2024 (updated) (2)
1. Founding partners
New Energy Realities, Transition and Innovation
Halfway 2030
Executive Programme, Paris
15th May 2024
Adriaan Kamp- Founder of Energy For One World
2. Adriaan Kamp
Energy For One World (2012- Present)
A consulting practice on Global Change, Energy
Architecture, UN SDG’s and Leadership.
Program Director Executive Energy (transition) & Leadership
Education
20 years Industry and Shell International Upstream ( 5
Countries and EPHQ).
3. Contents of Masterclass
Module 1 New Energy Realities
5 Key Drivers of Change & New Energy Possibilities
Module 2 Organising for Success: Making the Change(s) to Scale
Module 3 Leadership over Change (/Innovation)
4. 2024
War(s): Ukraine, Israel/ Gaza
Energy Security and Affordability
“ De-Risking” and “ Diversification”
viz-a-viz Calls for a New World Order
5. 5 Key Drivers of Change, New Energy Possibilities
5 Present Key Drivers of Change
• Global Human Development & Economic Growth
• Strength of our Underground
• Nature and our Planetary Boundaries
• Climate Change and Climate Realities
• Our Geo-Politics of Emotions
1+2+3+4 (+5)= “ Holistic Eco-system”
New Technology & Possibilities
• “ The Great Electrification” , AI, etc.
6. 6
2021
2030-2050
7.9 Billion
People
10 Billion
People
100 trillion
USD
economy
180-210
trillion USD
225 million
oil eq/day
(15 TW)
500- 750 million
oil eq/day
(55 TW)
414 ppm CO2 and Carbon Budget
consumed for 1.5 degrees/ 21st
century
??? ppm CO2 and
Climate Change Effects
12. Club of Rome (2nd March 1972-2nd March 2022):
50 years Limits to Growth
1972 Limits To Growth.First UN Environmental Conference in Stockholm, Sweden.
Establishment of UNEP in Kenya.
1972 Henry Kissinger and Richard Nixon visit China
1975 End of Vietnam War
1979 Margaret Thatcher PM of UK
1981: Reagan becomes president of the USA. Start of NeoLiberal World Order.
1986: Microsoft IPO
1987 Gro Brundtland Report: “ Our Common Future” Gordon Gekko “ Greed is Good” in
Wall Street Blockbuster Movie
1989 Fall Berlin Wall
1992 Rio Conference
1995 First COP meeting in Bonn
1996 Start of Mobile Internet
2000 China joins WTO- and global free-trade got its other boost
2000 Millenium Development Goals
2001 9/11 - Fall of Twin Tower
2012 Rio + 20
2015 COP21, UNSDGs adopted at UN. Laudato Si!
2016 Trump President- Exit Paris, Brexit
2021 - 2022 Corona, COP26, 27, 28
2024- Wars in Ukraine/ Israel. Calls for a New World Order/ Multi-Polar
30. Sultan Al Jaber : Bringing the World together for COP28:
1.5 Degrees alive
31. COP28 (2)
1st Global Stocktake (Ambition Level)
Input Regional Climate Summits (“ Global
South” )
Climate Finance- Marrakech, COP28
Presidency
“ Activation” of the Paris Agreement
Inclusion of Fossil Fuel Industry (e.g.
methane emissions pledge, “ unabated” oil
and gas, subsidies, tax)
Loss and Damage
Finance, Finance, Finance
42. Key Take-Aways from this Global Summit
0) Key panelists believed that we have said farewell to the liberal world
order, known to us - over the past 30 years.
(1) Almost all of the audience and panelists no longer believed that the
1.5 Degrees Paris Agreement was attainable, and that the 2030
emissions reduction targets (re. Net Zero) will be achieved. There is a
long long overshoot and delays. Politicians should start to share these
realities.
(2) The US IRA is attracting Europe renewable businesses and
investments away from Europe. However, and due to the sentiments
on Energy Security in the US and elsewhere; GE sees that Nuclear
and Gas are now " top performers in energy order portfolios" - and that
" Wind, Grids and Renewables" are building-up backlogs (jammed FID
queues)
(3) The present Geo-Politics prevents us from having the good, more
open and better conversations across the boards: Energy Security
and New Trade Protectionism is hampering trust, the energy transition
or sustainability efforts. The present sensitivities, strive and
vulnerabilities- also over the new energy system- on and with China,
self evident.
(4) No matter how many Spring Meetings there will be, with new
promises or finance flows from the North to the South- by Politicians
and Bankers , without the relevant attendance of the Private Sector
and Society- nothing will move. There is an urgent need for (new
styled) "Convening Power" - and where all relevant stakeholders
(legal, finance, economy, ecology, gov/ business, business and
program development of BigOil and Electrification" -are getting to one
table-and to frame and realize the New. This is true: nationally,
regionally and in our global trade relations. And it is about PPP.
(5) There was also time for, as some will say, the more " woke
agenda" : energy poverty and energy justice. A lady from the Biden
Administration knew how to mention that 50% of Black America has
problems with paying their energy bills, and that it is also a known
fact that the poorer families of America live next door to heavy and
polluting refineries and industries: shortening their lives. "Energy
Transition" without eyes for these injustices- is missing the point: it is
to be all inclusive.
(6) Mr. Podesta, the " new" special climate envoy of the Biden
Administration (replacing John Kerry)- well first of all, and for all to
see, is a different man and character then the charismatic John Kerry,
and secondly- and not unimportantly- brought-in a new Big Elephant
in the Room (and in the US international trade relations): Rightly he
started to mention that the global trade market has gone perhaps too
intense with shipping products (oil, containers, manufactured goods)
over the seas and in the skies: intense carbon emissions. However, in
his lecture (" he read his message from paper" )- there was a clear
undertone that some, if not most of the new trading rules in his
mind,were there to protect American manufacturing, advance its
position and disadvantage or punish China and/or (more polluting)
developing nations: perhaps not such an elegant, wise or fair position
to take!
55. War in Ukraine : The Great De-coupling
Extension of Coal Licenses, Imports of new LNG, Energy Saving
Measures, Sanctioning of Russia Economy and Oil and Gas imports,
Rationing of Gas Consumption, Doubling of Renewables Capacities,
Subsidizing of Energy Bills to the Consumers, Oil Reserves, Scouting for
New Safe Resource Basins, including New Fracking, Accelerating
Transitions,
56. War in Ukraine
Impact on Energy and Sustainability : “The Great De-coupling” (1)
Closing the Ranks: If…then…Me, We, They,
Them and The Others…
….Are we truly “ in control” ?
Extension of Coal Licenses,
Imports of new LNG to Europe from US, Qatar, Africa
Energy Saving Measures,
Sanctioning of Russia Economy and Oil and Gas imports,
(Western Companies sanctionting or exiting Russian Assets
and Market)
Rationing of Gas Consumption,
Doubling of Renewables Capacities,
Subsidizing of Energy Bills to the Consumers,
Access to Oil Reserves,
Scouting for New Safe Resource Basins, including New
Fracking,
Accelerating Transitions, etc. etc.
57. War in Ukraine
Impact on Energy and Sustainability : “The Great De-coupling” (2)
"In uncertain times, one of bp's primary roles
is to maintain the safe, secure supply of the
energy on which societies depend. The
importance of that role has rarely been
clearer than in recent weeks."
Helge Lund, chair
60. "The debate around climate targets
was “very emotional” he said. “The
focus of everyone should be about
reducing emissions. But you cannot
invest for the industry now, it is total
chaos I have to say. Total chaos,
the whole debate and the whole
discussion.”
61.
62.
63.
64.
65.
66.
67.
68.
69.
70. Contents of Masterclass
Module 1 New Energy Realities
5 Key Drivers of Change & New Energy Possibilities
Module 2 Organising for Success: Making the Change(s) to Scale
Module 3 Leadership over Change (/Innovation)
78. “COP26: On the back of an envelope”- 130 trillion USD
130 trillion over 30 years, is about
4 trillion per year.
Will that work?
Let me give you some hints:
First of all,
Today, our world energy system has a working capacity of about
15-20 TW, and that equals 15- 20 Trillion USD in assets.
Presently, every year, the world needs approximately 300-400 Bn
USD/annum to counter depletion, allow for growth and maintain or
keep the oil and gas flowing.
Over coming decades our world energy system is expected to double:
to at least 40-50 TW is thus 40-50 Trillion USD in assets.
So spending 4 trillion USD per annum (on energy system), in a
present world economy of 100 trillion USD) looks like (more than)
enough to see the job gets done (ie invest in existing and new
infrastructures transition)
Now and But, :
We, OECD, have today nor the capacity, nor the
capabilities(manufacturing, value chains) nor the skills
(program management, engineers, construction people), nor
the socio-economic and political system to make these
transition spending programs at home, or abroad.
And: We need “to drive” our present incumbent energy
corporations to change this, scale-up and step-up.
And as a Swedish Foreign Investment Manager noted: It is
not about the money or on paper. This is about the real
physical world: we find it difficult to create bankable projects
in a messy world, abroad. Collectively, we are invited to
become much better in project framing and de-risking- and
realize beyond our imagination.
The US-China co-operation and Boris Johnson New Grid Initiative (with India) - can be the
Kick-starter to see this going- and free-up this dream of making Energy Free of Concerns.
79. From 80-20 till (60-40) till 20-80 before 2050: 4 Trillion USD/annum .
80. What “Power” comes out of your “Socket” ?
As Black as Black
can be
(Coal, Dirt, Unfair),
And
Unreliable
Affordable, Nor
Sustainable
Grey
Gas Powered
Imported LNG Gas, with
ETS Offsets/ Nature
Based Solutions.
Available, Costly
(but not 100%
Sustainable)
Local Utility Scaled
Renewables Plus Gas/
CCUS
Plus
ETS/ Nature Based
Solutions
With market rivalries, profit
seeking and competitions
Available?, Affordable?
(and not 100% sustainable)
Regional Utility
Scaled Renewables
(Super Grid) Plus
Local mini-grids and
Zero-Plus Home
(and sustainable,
circular economy
value chains)
(Energy Free of
Concerns)
85. 1 Energy is a system- behind every button, switch and fuel
pump is a myriad of connections.
2. Energy Transition is a Process, not a destination and it
cannot be delivered all in one go.
3. Diversity in energy systems is increasing in the broadest
sense- geographies, technologies, skills, and cultures
4. The Future of Energy cannot be predicted, but better
energy futures can be co-created if we avoid fear , and
open-up to new and progressive bridges and pathways
5. Energy Technology Transition always involves societal
disruption and transformation
1. Rebalancing act between our Engineered World with
that of Nature.
2. Rebalancing act between ourselves- Rich- Poor,
North-South, East-West, Have and Have nots.
3. It is about the Climate AND it is about the UN SDGs
4. It is about making new Energy-Economies
Architectures: Sustainable, Inclusive and Free of
Concerns. Here and There. Now and Tomorrow
5. It is about Responsible, Decent and Servant
Leadership
WEC 100 years lessons on Energy
Transitions
EFOW 10 years lessons with Energy
Transition
( e.g. 99 Theses to Build Back Better)
WEC : World Energy Council led by Dr Angela Wilkinson
87. A Couple of (Policy) Recommendations
(from 99 Theses to Build Back Better)
1. Re-frame our present neo-liberal free-market Economies, there where required:
From Wealth to Well-Being, and in more harmony with Nature. De-growth &
Circularities - where needed.
2. Take Energy Transition Seriously- for making Energy-Economies Free of Concerns:
Realize the 3 to 4 tn USD/annum Finance, Capacities and Capabilities Build-up for
“The Great Electrification”
3. Re-organize present Energy Market Constellation- see Quadrant-, in the West and
with the Rest: Away from Free Market, Portfolio Opportunism & Sole Ownerships
towards true new and shared R&R, Utility and Commitments towards New Energy
Architectures.( “ Utility to the People” - there where relevant).
4. Realize UNSDGs in Trade and Trade Relations. Businesses and Governments can act
here more aligned and attuned. Strengthen UN Global Compact.
5. Build New Bridges of Peace, Capabilities and Hope.
90. Organizing ourselves: “zippered”- in dimensions
Mainstream
• UN Re-organisation; UN 2.0 (0)
• Governments (1)
• Corporates and Global Compact (2a): Energy Transitions to Scale
• Government- Business- Science Community (UN SDSN) (2b)
• New Entrants/ Innovators/ Game-changers (3)
• Sectors/ Green Growth/ UN SDGs (4)
1+2+3+4 +5= Hybrid Eco-system
Bottoms-up
• Community, Start-up Community (5)
92. Our world is under construction:
The Rise of a new middle-class ( 3 Billion) – in MegaCities
and more people live in Greater Tokyo (35m) than in all of Canada
The top 10 cities by population:
1. Tokyo, (34 million)
2. Seoul (24.4 million)
3. Guangzhou (24.2 million)
4. Mexico City (23.4 million)
5. Delhi (23.2 million)
6. Mumbai (22.8 million)
7. New York (22.2 million)
8. Sao Paolo (20.9 million)
9. Manila (19.6 million)
10. Shanghai (19.4 million)
All above fit comfortably into the list
Of Top-50 nations by population
110. India will continue to
rely on coal power until
it becomes developed
country: Environment
Minister
Responding to a question at a press
conference here, the minister also said
India resisted pressure from developed
countries to end the use of fossil fuels at the
UN climate conference in the United Arab
Emirates.
119. Siemens Dismantling an Icon
Since Kaeser took charge in 2013, there has been a flurry
of spin-offs, carve outs and joint ventures at the German
giant
● May 2014: Siemens slims its divisions to nine from
16; carves out health care and announces listing of
hearing aid business
● September 2014: Siemens sells stake in kitchen and
washing machine business to Bosch
● November 2014: Sells hearing-aid unit to EQT for
2.14 billion euros ($2.4 billion)
● June 2016: Announces merger of wind power
division to form Siemens Gamesa
● November 2016: Announces Siemens Healthineers
will be brought to market
● February 2019: Plan to form rail joint venture with
France’s Alstom is blocked by European authorities
● May 2019: Siemens announces plan to carve out
power and gas businesses
● 2023-2024 Siemens Gasema Wind Turbine Troubles
and Loss making. Restructuring for New Growth.
120. Germany Coal Commission: Phase-Out 2038 (??)
120
BERLIN (Reuters) - 26.1.2019: Germany should shut down all of its coal-fired power plants by 2038 at the latest, a
government-appointed commission said on Saturday, proposing at least 40 billion euros ($45.7 billion) in aid to regions affected by the
phase-out.
123. Germany Energiewende
Goals:
Climate neutral by 2045
Phasing-out of Coal by 2030 (Luzerath!)
Outlaw combustion engines (e-fuels)
End Gas Power
Some Realities:
Nuclear exit, Gas from Russia Ended.
New Power, Gas, Oil deals with Scandinavia, US, Qatar, Africa
Step-up Hydrogen, LNG, Wind/Solar, PowerGrids
Need to fill-up gas storage again 85% (1 oct), 95% by (1 nov)
Dramatically behind in target to achieve 80% renewable Power
by 2030, as well 65% emission reductions.
State subsidies on Energy to Industry, to combat US, China
competition.
“ Mittelstand” Energy Prices sky-high.
Rescued and Nationalised part of Utilities (Uniper, in talks with
RWE)
124. Energy in the Netherlands (1)
• PVV, VVD, BBB and NSC? Face of the
new PM?
• What to do after “Groningen Gas
(21/12 Bcm) & New Energy
Transition (Climate) Accord- II ?
• What to do with/after Pernis?
• Electrification of Homes, Cars,
Transport and Cities
• Greening of intensive energy
Industries-, Agri-, Petro-;
• Regional Energy Markets
• What new export markets are there
to create?
125. Energy in the Netherlands (2)
The challenge the Dutch are facing is a triple national budget and investment
challenge:
• 1. The decrease in (state) income due to the earlier closure of Groningen Gas.
The estimated economic value of the lost gas is between 50-125 Billion Euro.
• 2. Additional expenses to be able to import Gas (temporarily) and as
"bridging fuel" - in the transition and accelerated investments in (eg) Wind
Offshore, as an alternative to the loss of Groningen Gas.
• 3. Renovation of Dutch energy architecture: Investments in electrification,
the built environment and agri-, industry- to "get off gas / gasless" and to
meet Paris [1]
• War in Ukraine
125
150. Key Take-Aways from this Global Summit
0) Key panelists believed that we have said farewell to the liberal world
order, known to us - over the past 30 years.
(1) Almost all of the audience and panelists no longer believed that the
1.5 Degrees Paris Agreement was attainable, and that the 2030
emissions reduction targets (re. Net Zero) will be achieved. There is a
long long overshoot and delays. Politicians should start to share these
realities.
(2) The US IRA is attracting Europe renewable businesses and
investments away from Europe. However, and due to the sentiments
on Energy Security in the US and elsewhere; GE sees that Nuclear
and Gas are now " top performers in energy order portfolios" - and that
" Wind, Grids and Renewables" are building-up backlogs (jammed FID
queues)
(3) The present Geo-Politics prevents us from having the good, more
open and better conversations across the boards: Energy Security
and New Trade Protectionism is hampering trust, the energy transition
or sustainability efforts. The present sensitivities, strive and
vulnerabilities- also over the new energy system- on and with China,
self evident.
(4) No matter how many Spring Meetings there will be, with new
promises or finance flows from the North to the South- by Politicians
and Bankers , without the relevant attendance of the Private Sector
and Society- nothing will move. There is an urgent need for (new
styled) "Convening Power" - and where all relevant stakeholders
(legal, finance, economy, ecology, gov/ business, business and
program development of BigOil and Electrification" -are getting to one
table-and to frame and realize the New. This is true: nationally,
regionally and in our global trade relations. And it is about PPP.
(5) There was also time for, as some will say, the more " woke
agenda" : energy poverty and energy justice. A lady from the Biden
Administration knew how to mention that 50% of Black America has
problems with paying their energy bills, and that it is also a known
fact that the poorer families of America live next door to heavy and
polluting refineries and industries: shortening their lives. "Energy
Transition" without eyes for these injustices- is missing the point: it is
to be all inclusive.
(6) Mr. Podesta, the " new" special climate envoy of the Biden
Administration (replacing John Kerry)- well first of all, and for all to
see, is a different man and character then the charismatic John Kerry,
and secondly- and not unimportantly- brought-in a new Big Elephant
in the Room (and in the US international trade relations): Rightly he
started to mention that the global trade market has gone perhaps too
intense with shipping products (oil, containers, manufactured goods)
over the seas and in the skies: intense carbon emissions. However, in
his lecture (" he read his message from paper" )- there was a clear
undertone that some, if not most of the new trading rules in his
mind,were there to protect American manufacturing, advance its
position and disadvantage or punish China and/or (more polluting)
developing nations: perhaps not such an elegant, wise or fair position
to take!
165. Focus Areas (Energy Sector)
(Year 2019 and beyond- example only)
Oil& Petrochemicals – Plastics in the
Oceans, Fumes in the Air, and Carbon
in the Atmosphere
Gas, Emissions vs New Power- and
Mobility- Energy Architectures
Energy Architecture Developments,
Economies and UN SDGs
GeoPolitics, Free trade and “Energy
to All” or
“Energy-Economies Free of
Concerns”
Change &
Transformation
166. Old and New Clickable
Presentations
Vs 350 Bn USD investment
167. From 80-20 till (60-40) till 20-80 before 2050: 4 Trillion USD/annum .
185. Halfway 2030: New (institutionalised) possibilities thinking
,with Lessons Learned post-covid, Ukraine, New World Order
1. How do we look at our earlier options and choices, now?
2. What is going well? What can we celebrate ?
3. What is “under pressure or may turn out- an illusion”?
4. What may need to change- in our approach and tone of voice- knowing how Paris
Agreement and UNSDGs were constructed?
5. What key (sector, market, corporate strategic ) choices, interventions and (integrated)
decisions can we better mak?
6. What is (urgently) needed in order to succeed in what we are planning and aiming to
deliver- to our children and grand-children? What opportunities are we planning for to
deliver now and in 2030?
185
186. A Couple of (Policy) Recommendations
(from 99 Theses to Build Back Better)
1. Re-frame our present neo-liberal free-market Economies, there where required:
From Wealth to Well-Being, and in more harmony with Nature. De-growth &
Circularities - where needed.
2. Take Energy Transition Seriously- for making Energy-Economies Free of Concerns:
Realize the 3 to 4 tn USD/annum Finance, Capacities and Capabilities Build-up for
“The Great Electrification”
3. Re-organize present Energy Market Constellation- see Quadrant-, in the West and
with the Rest: Away from Free Market, Portfolio Opportunism & Sole Ownerships
towards true new and shared R&R, Utility and Commitments towards New Energy
Architectures.( “ Utility to the People” - there where relevant).
4. Realize UNSDGs in Trade and Trade Relations. Businesses and Governments can act
here more aligned and attuned. Strengthen UN Global Compact.
5. Build New Bridges of Peace, Capabilities and Hope.
189. From WEF/ Accenture: The energy architecture is an integrated physical system of
energy sources, carriers and demand sectors shaped by government, industry and
civil society.
The energy architecture on location is a reflection of the socio-political,
economic, ecological and business philosophies, leadership and interests
exercised on location.
The energy architecture in a country, region or global community is (ideally) to serve (the rise of,
establishment of) thriving sustainable societies- making energy available, affordable and
sustainable to all: balancing economic interests with that of society and nature. Here and there.
Now and in the future.
189
Energy Architecture
192. Princeton Wedges
Grow and Safe Energy
Change Energy Supply Source
Change Energy Architecture
Change Products (Cars, Homes) &
Industry Designs
Change Energy- Economy and
Direction of Lifestyles: Welfare
Change Leadership / Corporation
Paradigm
192
193. Levels of Change
•Level 1
•Level 2
•Level 3
•Level 4
• Change and No Change. Resistance to Change. Policy, Administrative and Derivative Change
(CO2 tax, ETS, Accounting). Coal vs. Gas. Continued backroom lobbying
• Full Integration of Renewables (clean-tech, energy conservations, smartness, etc.) in the
Energy Architecture - but not with a system change. Retained regulations, ownership ,
revenue, tax and capital control structures
• Transition to a New Energy Architecture and Newly shared socio-economic and corporate
business models- also in international trade
• Transformation of Economies and Societies. Eco-modernity and New human consciousness
194. The way it works: Country Categories and Markets (1)
•OECD- USA, Canada, Europe, Japan, Australia
•(Richer, Resource based) OPEC/ GasPec
•China Inc., India Inc.
•Developing (without Resources)
•Developing (with Resources)
•Least developed. Poor.
195. The way it works (2) : A New Formula in Business and Trade
196. Mainstream
•Governments (1)
•Energy Corporates and Incumbents (2)
•New Entrants/ Innovators/ Change-makers (3)
•Non-Energy Sectors/ Green Growth/ UN SDGs (4)
1+2+3+4 +5= Hybrid Eco-system
Bottoms-up
•Community, Start-up Community (5)
The way it works (3): New Forms of Collaborations
197. The way it may work (4): Finding the Rubik-Cube Combination
“Organizational Forms and Formats” - that works
“Horizontal and Vertical Integration”
197
e.g.
Country
Categories,
Geographies &
Markets
Business Formula-
and
Cross-Sectors
Forms of
Collaboration
● Strengthening human well-being
and capabilities;
● Shifting towards sustainable and
just economies;
● Building sustainable food systems
and healthy nutrition patterns;
● Achieving energy decarbonization
and universal access to energy;
● Promoting sustainable urban and
peri-urban development; and
● Securing the global environmental
commons.
198.
199. Contents of Masterclass
Module 1 New Energy Realities
5 Key Drivers of Change & New Energy Possibilities
Module 2 Organising for Success: Making the Change(s) to Scale
Module 3 Leadership over Change (/Innovation)
200. A Couple of (Policy) Recommendations
(from 99 Theses to Build Back Better)
1. Re-frame our present neo-liberal free-market Economies, there where required:
From Wealth to Well-Being, and in more harmony with Nature. De-growth &
Circularities - where needed.
2. Take Energy Transition Seriously- for making Energy-Economies Free of Concerns:
Realize the 3 to 4 tn USD/annum Finance, Capacities and Capabilities Build-up for
“The Great Electrification”
3. Re-organize present Energy Market Constellation- see Quadrant-, in the West and
with the Rest: Away from Free Market, Portfolio Opportunism & Sole Ownerships
towards true new and shared R&R, Utility and Commitments towards New Energy
Architectures.( “ Utility to the People” - there where relevant).
4. Realize UNSDGs in Trade and Trade Relations. Businesses and Governments can act
here more aligned and attuned. Strengthen UN Global Compact.
5. Build New Bridges of Peace, Capabilities and Hope.
207. “Every Energy Company and Every Energy Architecture in this
world can be improved upon in order to raise the availability,
affordability and sustainability of energy to all”.- Adriaan
Kamp, -2015
Every Country and Every Organization in this World can be
improved upon in order to raise the human, social, economic
and sustainable development to all- Adriaan Kamp- 2015
207
208. "The invitation we have today is to see and to blend our consciousness
and care for Deep Peace, Deep Humanity and Deep Ecology with our
more mainstream energy economics and politics- at play"
Let us direct our work and collective efforts towards attaining
“Energy Free of Concerns & Societies Free of Concerns”
Here and There. Now and Tomorrow
Adriaan Kamp
208
226. Napoleon’s Six Winning Principles, and Leading in the Front
• EXACTITUDE
awareness, research and continuous planning
• SPEED
reducing resistance, increasing urgency, and
providing focus
• FLEXIBILITY
building teams that are adaptable, empowered and
unified
• SIMPLICITY
clear, simple objectives, messages, and processes
• CHARACTER
integrity, calmness, and responsibility
• MORAL FORCE
providing order, purpose, recognition and rewards
Energy For One World- 2012, All Rights Reserved
231. From 80-20 till (60-40) till 20-80 before 2050: 4 Trillion USD/annum .
232. 232
We cannot save the Planet (Climate, Nature), if we cannot save
the People (Economy, Social Justice).
The People cannot be saved, if the Planet (Nature) is broken, at
risk or fails (e.g. pollution, resource scarcities, climate risks).
We better first solve (our problems, our conflicts, our pains), before
we can make true progress and change”
233. Energy For One World- 2012, All Rights Reserved
“”Resistance to change falls when the benefits are
made clear
Resistance to change falls when the Story feels Right
(“The Star” is Chosen “Right”)
We cannot “run” ourselves into Sustainability. Slow
down and walk in more beauty.
238. Servant Leadership
•Compassionate love
•Authenticity
•Humbleness
•Empowerment
•Provide direction
•Stewardship
Here’s the essence of the gospel of Greenleaf. First and
foremost, truly great managers want to serve the people
they lead. They do this by supporting them rather than
dictating to them, and by assigning top priority to employee
well-being. Deceptively simple and deeply profound
240. Hofstede: Cultures and Organizations. The
way it works
240
The Way it Works for a System Rethink
World View
Cultures
Institutions
Our Leadership Ways
242. Founding partners
“In Leadership- we are all students for life”
Deep Peace
Deep Humanity
Deep Ecology
Energy For One World- 2012, All Rights Reserved
246. 4 Simple Questions on Impact and Relationships
(based on some of Doughnut Economics, Economics of Francesco)
Ecological Ceiling
How does this activity be as
generous as the wildlands, next
door?
Social Foundation
How does this activity allow or
support the people of this place: that
they can thrive- in a peaceful, happy
and healthy way?
Ecological Ceiling
How can this activity respect the
health and well-being of the whole
planet?
Social Foundation
How does this activity allow or
support the Well-being and Peace of
the Self, Other and All People.
LOCAL GLOBAL
247. 247
1. Sustainable Development- a new kind of
Globalization (2016)
2. Sustainable Humanity (2012)
3. We can no longer manage decency (2018)
4. Aga Khan University Special Lecture Series:
Can we find a shared global ethics for the 21st
century? (2020)
“Leading Global Decency”
248.
249.
250. 99 Theses to Build Back Better (available on Amazon)
250
255. A practice on Global Change, Energy Architecture, UN SDG’s and Our Leadership.
Energy For One World
Adriaan Kamp (Founder)
Skype: Adriaan.Kamp
TelCall Direct line (Netherlands):
0031-614939194
E-Mail:
adriaankamp@energyforoneworld.com
www.EnergyForOneWorld.com
256. A Brief History of our Industry (1)
Atoms and Electrons
Colonel Drake- Titusville, 1859
Edison - Pearl Street
Station, 1882
John D. Rockefeller, 1870
Henry Ford- 1914
257. A Brief History of our Industry (2)
50 years ago
1974
1972
Brent Field Development
1975
258. UPSTREAM
OFFSHORE
PLATFORM
OIL
SANDS
Bitumen
DOWNSTREAM
Feedstock
Synthetic
crude oil
Fuels, lubricants and speciality products including
Bitumen and liquefied petroleum gas
UPGRADER
PLANT
Oil
REFINERY
Gas
LNG
LIQUEFICATION
PLANT
GAS TO
LIQUIDS
PLANT
BIOFUELS
PLANT
BIOFUELS
PLANT
WIND
TURBINES
Energy for industrial
and domestic use
LNG
REGASIFICATION
TERMINAL
POWER
STATION
ONSHORE
PRODUCTION FACILITY
Gas
Oil
CHEMICAL
PLANT
Petrochemicals used for plastics,
Coatings and detergents
Global Oil & Gas businesses
259. Oil & Gas: A successful energy story well over
100 years
1859
1870
1910
1910s
WW II
1919
1938
Colonel Drake find oil in Titusville, Pennsylvania
Royal Dutch/Shell Group of companies created
Exciting times for the oil industry
Expansion in Europe, Africa and the Americas
Mass production of cars: a vast new market
US Petroleum Administration of War with US Oil
companies
made a strategic advantage in fuelling the war.
Strategic importance of oil tankers.
First non-stop flight across the Atlantic,
powered by Shell fuel
Oil struck in Kingdom of Saudi Arabia:
Damman-7
1833 - 1945
1907, Meanwhile in
the Netherlands
Rockefeller creates Standard Oil Company and find business model for growth
Henry Ford introduces the model T-Ford and first assembly line
260. Oil & Gas: A successful energy story well over
100 years
1950s &
1960s
Oil crises. Opening- up of the North Sea. Turn to natural gas, good for 15% of
Europe’s energy consumption, Shell supplying about half. Pioneering liquefied
natural gas (LNG). IEA being created in 1973/1974.
1980s
1990s
2001
2008
The golden age for the Seven Sisters. Creation of OPEC.
Advanced offshore technology, new products and services
Start selling unleaded petrol. IOC hold global leadership position
Changing faces in the oil industry: the rise and importance
of national oil companies . Creation of IEF
WWII - 2023
1970s
2009+
Industry growth, including new frontiers such
as Arctic, Deep-Sea, Unconventional Oil & Gas..
The Golden Age of Gas
9/11 and its aftermath. Rapid rise of (new) energy demand
in the East.
Oil hits 100 USD/ barrel.
261.
262.
263.
264.
265.
266.
267.
268. 5 Key Factors Determining Our New Energy
Realities 2.0
1. Direction of our Human Development: Population, Wealth, Lifestyles & Habits, Resource
Use, Energy: Intense vs. More Durable, Sustainable
2. Strength of our Underground: Oil , Gas, Earth Mineral Resources- (E)ROI and Durabilities
of Reserves (> next 100 years)
3. Planetary Boundaries and Our Relationships with Nature, 6 out of 9 Planetary
Boundaries Crossed- Vital for our Natural World: Tree of Life vs Tree of Knowledge,
(Economy, Money, Market, Power, Influence, Engineered World)
4. Climate Change, Climate Agreements, Actions and/or our Inter-State Behaviors,
Organizations, Commitments and Relationships: Polarisations, Lawyers, Politics & Courts,
Blame Games, Anxieties & Fears, GreenWash, Illusions, Corruptions, Conflicts, Wars vs
Peace, Hope, Bridge Building, Reforms, Good Future Making
5. Geo-politics of Emotions: Collaborations or Rivalries and Competitions. Energy
Availabilities, Affordabilities vs Energy Securities, Weaponisation, Sanctions, Supply Chain
securities: Energy to All vs Energy “The Prize” , To Me, First and Best.
269. Red-Lines, GreenWish, GreenWash and the Real Deal
269
Greenwashing Top 15 (it was tough cutting the list from 100+) by Assaad Razouk (energy specialist)
1 Big Oil rebranding methane gas decades ago as “natural”
2 Big Oil inventing carbon footprint calculators
3 Any corporate plastic “recycling” pledge: Of all the plastic ever created, only 9% has been recycled
4 Carbon capture projects
5 The green bond market: All bonds should be green
6 Any polluting company making noises about “planting trees.
7 Voluntary carbon markets (their time is long gone)
8 Corporate "net zero" pledges with no plans to cut emissions to zero
9 Oil companies trumpeting renewables while planning to maintain or increase oil & gas production
10 The IEA's '7 Key Principles for Implementing Net Zero' document omitting any mention of the words "oil", "gas", "coal" or "fossil fuels"
11 Anything insurance companies say about net zero or cutting fossil fuel exposure
12 Law firms
13 Almost all of the ESG financial industry
14 Saudi Arabia wanting to plant 10 billion trees even though it doesn't have a single river
15 Carbon neutral LNG cargos