This report examines the complex process of transforming power systems. It offers evidence for power system transformation by providing a collection of empirical examples of the types of innovations that are emerging worldwide.
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This presentation describes the solutions to sustainable private capital for small-scale distributed energy access that are central to achieving universal energy access targets.
This database provides energy information for countries throughout the world, including Africa; the Baltic States, Central Europe, and Eastern Europe; Latin America and the Caribbean; the Middle East; Russia and FSU; South Asia; South East Asia; and the Pacific Region.
This roadmap shows how a doubling of the global renewable energy share can be achieved by 2030 at negligible additional costs with actual net savings.
This report describes how member states in the United Nations Economic Commission (UNECE) for Europe have different energy situations and vary in their potential for and progress in renewable energy and energy efficiency.
This report describes how 2015 was a watershed year for international development, with global leaders meeting to adopt a new set of sustainable development goals, as well as the financing framework that underpins those goals.
The public-private roundtable summarized on this web page describes how over one billion people globally lack access to electricity, and how providing clean and affordable energy services to these unelectrified populations will be a critical driver for poverty reduction, job creation, and improve
According to the authors of this report, the Paris agreement on climate change opened nearly $23 trillion in opportunities for climate-smart investments in emerging markets between now and 2030.
This white paper is part of Gender Equality for Climate Change Opportunities by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) in 2014.
This European Commission communication to the European Parliament and Council concludes that moving towards a low-carbon economy needs new technology to be conceived, tested, and then deployed.