Showing posts with label renewable energy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label renewable energy. Show all posts

Friday, September 16, 2022

Financing the energy transition in Ecuador

Financing the energy transition in Ecuador 

By Luis Fierro Carrion (*)

Twitter: @Luis_Fierro_C

The acceleration of climate change and the Russian invasion of Ukraine have produced a renewed impetus regarding the need to move towards an energy transition in Ecuador.

The extortion generated by the indigenous movement strike, which forced the government to increase the subsidy for fossil fuels, makes even more urgent the need to reduce fossil fuel consumption and promote the use of renewable energy.

Fossil fuel subsidies constitute complete nonsense, given their negative impact on income distribution, on health, climate change, air pollution and the fiscal deficit.

One way to address these problems is to promote the use of electric transportation, whether individual or collective. In the collective sphere, it seems that the Quito Metro, whose construction ended without having resolved the issue of its operational management, is finally going to start operating in a few months. In Cuenca, the tram also had to wait more than a year between its construction and its operation. In Guayaquil, the Airway that connects Durán with Guayaquil came into operation, although with little influx of the public. In Guayaquil, the use of electric buses has also been promoted.

These are incipient steps in the use of electro-mobility in Ecuador. There are resources from multilateral development banks (IDB, CAF, AFD, KfW) to promote a more intensive use of electric vehicles, which also requires the installation of a network of battery charging stations.

By using electric vehicles, the consumption of fossil fuels is reduced (and, therefore, the cost of subsidies for the State is lower), and the excess capacity of hydroelectric generation is better used (the vehicles should preferably be recharged late at night, with a reduced rate).

Efforts have also been made to promote renewable energy beyond large hydroelectric plants, through the approval for the installation of solar and wind power plants (in Loja, Manabí, Galapagos, among others).

The government has announced plans to rationalize the use of natural gas, which may include: stopping burning gas at the oil wells and refineries, and instead capturing and using such valuable resources; and making better use of the gas from the Gulf (instead of forcing the thermoelectric generation at the Termogas Machala plant, at hours when hydroelectric generation would suffice).

There are resources available to promote the energy transition towards greater use of renewable energy and more energy efficiency, by multilateral and bilateral development banks (World Bank, European Investment Bank, IDB, CAF, AFD, KfW, Green Climate Fund, etc.). 

The National Climate Finance Strategy was approved in February 2021. This strategy seeks to establish a clear and effective governance of climate finance; transversally integrate the climate approach in the financial system; and promote greater access to climate finance.

The Ministry of Economy and Finance and the Ministry of the Environment, Water and Ecological Transition are in charge of promoting these processes. In addition, the accreditation of a public bank before the Green Climate Fund and the Adaptation Fund is contemplated.

Ecuador is already a power in the generation of energy with low emissions, and must continue promoting the conversion of the vehicle fleet towards electromobility.

(*) A Spanish version of this column was published on September 16, 2022, in "Diario El Universo" of Ecuador:

https://www.eluniverso.com/opinion/columnistas/financiando-la-transicion-energetica-nota/




Monday, April 18, 2022

Invest in renewable energies, NOT in cryptos or NFTs

 It is really shocking to read this:

“money is flooding into less urgent developments in cryptocurrency, the so-called metaverse & the digital art collections sold as NFTs. Last year, venture capitalists invested $11.9 billion in renewable energy globally, compared with $30.1 billion in cryptocurrency & blockchain”

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/04/18/business/europe-green-energy-investors.html

There really should be NO investment in cryptocurrencies or NFTs, they are scams, Ponzi schemes, worthless assets.

On the other hand, it is URGENT to invest in renewable energies, including in battery storage, as this German company is trying to do:

"Green energy businesses in Europe are struggling to raise funds for the kind of projects needed to meet bold climate targets... VoltStorage, found some success selling storage battery packs for solar power to homeowners in Europe. Now the company is developing much larger batteries — each about the size of a shipping container — based on a chemical process that can store and discharge electricity over days, not just hours like today’s most popular battery technology. These ambitions to overcome the unreliable nature of renewable energy fit perfectly with Europe’s targets to reduce dependence on fossil fuels. But Mr. Bitner’s company is facing a frustrating reality that threatens to undercut Europe’s plans and poses a wider challenge in the global fight against climate change: a lack of money to finish the job."

Personally, I always recommend investing in broad Exchange Traded Funds, not individual companies.

Some ETFs where I have done well by doing good are:

#BGRN ISHARES USD Green Bond ETF

#CNRG SPDR S&P Clean Power ETF

#FAN First Trust Global Wind Energy ETF

#ICLN iShares Global Clean Energy ETF

#LIT Global X Lithium and Battery Tech ETF

#PBD Invesco Global Clean Energy ETF

#PBW Invesco WilderHill Clean Energy ETF

#TAN Invesco Solar ETF

In some cases, you have to be patient.  Both PBD and PBW, for example, are down in the last year, but they are significantly up compared to 2 or 5 years ago.

And in any case you can feel good that you are actually helping the planet instead of wasting energy on some absurd Ponzi scheme.

Sunday, August 29, 2021

Green Recovery and Climate Finance in Ecuador

Green Recovery in Ecuador: perspectives from Latin America

Luis Fierro, Vice Minister of Economy 

REPUBLIC OF ECUADOR

July 1, 2021

Presentation at the London Climate Action Week, panel organised by E3G

Includes:

  • National Macroeconomic Context 
  • Advances in climate action and green economic recovery
  • Climate Finance received by Ecuador
  • Green recovery projects underway


Recording:






Thursday, February 6, 2020

Ecuador and climate change

Ecuador and climate change

By Luis Fierro Carrion (@Luis_Fierro_Eco)

(English translation of the article published in "El Universo" on February 6, 2020)

The average global temperature registered in 2019 its second highest level in history, barely tenths of a grade below the record set in 2016. The last five years and the last decade have also been the hottest since records are kept.

Global warming is due to the increase in greenhouse gases (GHG) in the atmosphere, in particular carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane gas. The level of CO2 in the atmosphere has increased from 350 parts per million in 1990 to 411 in 2019.

The increase in GHG emissions is mainly due to the use of fossil fuels (oil, gas, coal, etc.), and to a lesser extent to deforestation, agricultural and industrial activities.

We have already reached an increase of 1.1 degrees Celsius with respect to the pre-industrial average temperature, and in the Paris Agreement the countries of the world promised to restrict the temperature increase to 1.5 degrees, or at most to 2 degrees.

However, in accordance with the commitments assumed by the countries (through the “Nationally Determined Contributions” or NDC), an increase of at least 3 degrees C is projected until the year 2100.

With the temperature increase that has already occurred, we have begun to suffer catastrophic effects:

- Massive fires in Australia, Brazil, Bolivia, the United States and other countries.

- Rise of the sea levels (due to the melting of the ice at the poles and Greenland). This already threatens several countries and regions that are a few meters above sea level, such as Kiribati, Maldives, Marshall Islands, Tuvalu, Vanuatu, Bangladesh or the states of Florida and Louisiana in the United States.

- Fluctuations in the rain, which causes droughts in some regions and floods in others.

- Melting glaciers and snow-capped mountains.

- Intensification of hurricanes and tropical cyclones.

- Increase of epidemics of tropical diseases (dengue, Zika, malaria, etc.).

- Expansion of invasive species and extinction of endemic species.

Although Ecuador generates only 0.11% of global emissions (less than its participation in the global population or GDP), in the Paris Agreement all countries expressed their commitment to reduce their GHG emissions.

In Ecuador's climate plan proposal (NDC), there was no commitment for an absolute emission reduction, only sector programs and policies, such as the increase in renewable energy generation or reforestation plans (despite which Ecuador is currently the country in Latin America that deforests the most, as a percentage).

Before the last presidential elections, I published, as part of an initiative of Grupo FARO and Ecuador Decide, “Promote Sustainable and Low-Emission Development, with Greater Resilience to Climate Change” (Grupo FARO, Quito, 2017).

In this document I proposed public policies to address the problem, such as:

- Ratification of the Paris Agreement (the current government did it).

- Reduction or elimination of fossil fuel subsidies (partially achieved in the governments of Correa and Moreno).

- Promote solar, wind, geothermal, tidal and small hydroelectric energy (large hydroelectric plants emit methane gas from their dams, especially in tropical areas).

- Promote greater energy efficiency.

- Provide incentives for electric vehicles and mass public transport (metro, tramways and electric buses).

- Promote actions to adapt to climate change, including more resilient infrastructure.

- Improve the management of solid waste, including the capture of methane gas for electricity generation.

- Constitute an investment fund to face climate change, which channels national and international resources (a small fund has been set up to replace the National Environmental Fund that former President Correa eliminated).

There are concessional, and even non-refundable, funds available to deal with climate change. The Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), CAF, the World Bank, the Green Climate Fund, the French Development Agency (AFD), the German Development Bank (KfW) and the European Investment Bank, among others, finance mitigation and adaptation programs and projects, and there are initiatives to channel these resources towards decentralized autonomous governments and the private sector. Banco Pichincha issued the first Green Bond in Ecuador, in 2019, with the support of IDB Invest, the International Finance Corporation (IFC) and Proparco (the private sector branch of AFD).

Original article in Spanish:  https://www.eluniverso.com/opinion/2020/02/03/nota/7721430/ecuador-cambio-climatico

The graph shows the temperature anomalies in 2014-2018. Higher than normal temperatures are shown in red, and lower than normal temperatures are shown in blue.


Saturday, December 22, 2018

Top 10 blog posts of 2018 / Mis artículos de blog más leídos en el 2018

My top 10 blog posts in 2018 / Mis artículos de blog más leídos en el 2018

#10 Publicaciones recientes sobre cambio climático y financiamiento climático en las cuales he participado

https://economicsandinvestment.blogspot.com/2018/10/publicaciones-recientes-sobre-cambio.html

#9 Another real estate bubble

http://economicsandinvestment.blogspot.com/2018/01/another-real-estate-bubble.html

#8 Contribution of cluster strategies and inter-cluster cooperation for the competitive progress of the EU and LAC

http://economicsandinvestment.blogspot.com/2018/05/contribution-of-cluster-strategies-and.html

#7 New study on financing the transition to renewable energy in the EU and LAC

https://economicsandinvestment.blogspot.com/2018/07/new-study-on-financing-transition-to.html

#6 Aumenta riesgo de recesión por guerra comercial desatada por Trump

https://economicsandinvestment.blogspot.com/2018/06/aumenta-riesgo-de-recesion-por-guerra.html

#5 Recent publications on climate change and climate finance in which I have participated

https://economicsandinvestment.blogspot.com/2018/11/recent-publications-on-climate-change.html

#4 Instituciones y fuentes de información sobre cambio climático

https://economicsandinvestment.blogspot.com/2018/01/instituciones-y-fuentes-de-informacion.html

#3 Defensive investments to confront stock market correction

https://economicsandinvestment.blogspot.com/2018/02/defensive-investments-to-confront-stock.html

#2 Many economists see a recession coming (as they did in 2007)

https://economicsandinvestment.blogspot.com/2018/08/many-economists-see-recession-coming-as.html

And the top blog post of 2018:

#1 International Trade, Technological Innovation and Public Policies: the case of Ecuador

https://economicsandinvestment.blogspot.com/2018/10/international-trade-technological.html




Sunday, November 11, 2018

Recent publications on climate change and climate finance in which I have participated

Recent publications on climate change and climate finance in which I have participated (as an author, co-author or editor).

Editor. Case Studies on Circular Economy models and integration of Sustainable Development Goals in business strategies in the EU and LAC. October 2018. EU-LAC Foundation. https://goo.gl/mCjpUJ

Editor, Strengthening EU-LAC Cooperation: Sharing Experiences for Present and Future Developments. October 2018. IFAIR,  https://goo.gl/QMoiWw

Editor. Financing the Transition to Renewable Energy in the EU, Latin America and the Caribbean
September 2018, EU-LAC Foundation. https://goo.gl/AMRHBU

Climate change, debt relief, debt swaps and climate finance. September 2017. Blog article. https://goo.gl/1wh68y

Promote Sustainable, Low-Emission Development, with greater resilience to Climate Change (Proposal for Public Policies in Ecuador). April 2017. Grupo FARO. https://goo.gl/HLVHuW (in Spanish)

Presentation on Climate Change,the Paris Agreement and Sustainable Development. June 2016. PowerPoint presentation. https://goo.gl/nxPxbp

Sources of Finance to implement the Nationally Determined Contributions. March 2016. PowerPoint presentation. https://goo.gl/KLp8R5 (in Spanish)

Climate Finance in the Paris Agreement: Challenges and Achievements. March 2016. PowerPoint presentation. https://goo.gl/Z14aBH (in Spanish)

AILAC achieved success in its climate finance priorities. February 2016. Blog article. https://goo.gl/DefKD5

Co-author. Innovative Instruments for Climate Finance, January 2015. Blog article. https://goo.gl/ytuphx

Gearing up for the COP20 in Lima - Progress in Climate Finance. October 2014.  Blog article. https://goo.gl/FtQLP1

Is sustainable development based on ethics and human beings possible?. September 2014. Article published in Revista Gestión of Ecuador. https://goo.gl/U1b7Uw (in Spanish)

Climate Change starts to take its toll. February 2014. Translation of article published in Revista Gestión of Ecuador. https://goo.gl/3W9j8s


Friday, February 14, 2014

Climate Change starts to take its toll

By Luis Fierro Carrión

[This is an English translation of the article published in Spanish in the February 2014 issue of “Revista Gestión”, Ecuador]

The devastating impact of typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines has highlighted once again how the Planet has begun to suffer the ravages of global warming. It is estimated that the typhoon (name given to tropical cyclones or hurricanes in the Western Pacific) caused more than 6,000 deaths and hundreds of thousands lost their homes and possessions, in the most severe cyclone on record, with winds reaching up to 315 kilometers per hour (equivalent to standing behind a turbine of a jet taking off).

Although the association between global warming and increased hurricane intensity is considered very likely but not a certainty, there is no doubt that the last decade has been the hottest in the historical record; the last 30 years have had the highest average temperature since at least the fourteenth century; and the global average temperature has already risen by 0.85 degrees Celsius since the nineteenth century.  There have been devastating storms in different continents, exacerbated by the high temperature of the water, a gradual rise in sea level, and the erosion and deterioration of the increasingly populated coasts of the Planet.

The impact of hurricanes Katrina and Sandy in the United States was also severe, not so much because of the intensity of the storms, but rather given the overflow of the seas, inundating land, and the destruction of dams, canals and other control mechanisms.

The frequency and cost of natural disasters has increased in recent decades, and one study estimated that if current trends in emissions and global warming continue, the losses in the U.S. alone due to climate disasters may increase from an average of $ 33 billion per year (in 1980-2012) to one trillion per year  (http://goo.gl/3W8k2O). The most expensive years to date in the U.S. have been 2005 with $ 160 billion in losses (four hurricanes, including Katrina) and 2012 ($ 110 billion in losses, including Hurricane Sandy and 10 other weather disasters – among them the drought in the Midwest) (http://goo.gl/67hfTg).

Even in the case of recent tsunamis (in Southeast Asia, Japan, etc.), which were caused by earthquakes, their impact may have been exacerbated by rising sea level and deterioration of coastal defenses. In Mexico, the unusual phenomenon of having simultaneous hurricanes on both coasts (Gulf of Mexico and the Pacific Ocean) occurred in late 2013, which caused 145 deaths and more than one million people affected.

We, humans, are to blame

A recent report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) established with near certainty (95% probability) that global warming observed since 1950 is caused by human activities, in particular the emissions of greenhouse gases (GHG) (http://goo.gl/GjanIM).

The Arctic Ocean is losing 1 million square kilometers of ice every decade since 1979, and globally there has been a thaw of 226 Gt (gigatons) per decade in that period. It is estimated that by 2050 the Arctic will have thawed completely.

The concentration of the greenhouse gases carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4) and nitrous oxide (N20) has increased by 40%, 150% and 20% from their pre-industrial levels, reaching levels of 391 ppm (parts per million), 1803 ppb (parts per billion) and 324 ppb, respectively, in 2011. These levels have not been seen on Earth in the last 20,000 years.

If current policies are maintained, and nothing is done to control climate change, it is estimated that the global average temperature could rise by up to 4.8 degrees C by 2100 (and probably increase by at least 2 degrees C); and that the sea level could ​​rise up to 80 cm (although one projection indicates that the rise could reach one meter) (http://goo.gl/KH5eXv).

The Poles and Greenland will continue to melt, many species will disappear, there will be more intense heat waves and droughts, but at the same time also more severe floods and hurricanes.

In the area of ​​Ecuador, precipitation will increase significantly in the Galapagos Islands and the Coast, but is expected to fall in the Sierra and Amazon. The oceans are becoming more acidic, which is having a devastating effect on coral reefs.

At the same time, there are other more alarmist voices that state that if we are to have any chance of avoiding the most severe ravages of global warming, we must immediately reduce by 80% the emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases generated by the consumption of fossil fuels. According to climatologist Bill McKibben (founder of www.350.org), for example, we should "keep in the ground” 80% of the hydrocarbon reserves that have already been identified, so that the increase in global average temperature does not exceed two degrees Celsius (http://goo.gl/CquxB3).

Unfortunately, recent international conferences on the subject have failed to establish a binding international commitment to reduce greenhouse gas emissions for all nations of the Earth, in particular for the biggest emitters - China and the United States –, and have only set voluntary “goals”. The "Copenhagen Accord", which effectively set no target for emissions but at least did establish the "goal" to keep additional global warming at less than two degrees, was not ratified by several countries, including the ALBA nations.

McKibben notes that two countries which, in rhetoric, have expressed the importance of reducing greenhouse gas emissions and the need to combat global warming, in practice have massively expanded the exploration and exploitation of their vast reserves of tar sands: Canada and Venezuela (despite being on opposite ideological poles).

A less alarmist view (but still alarming) is that held by the environmental economist and Nobel Prize winner, William Nordhaus, who recently published the book "The Climate Casino: Risk, Uncertainty, and Economics for a Warming World". While Nordhaus believes that there is uncertainty about the impact of GHG emissions, he however considers that this uncertainty should prompt an even stronger reaction today (given that the consequences could be even more catastrophic than what we now envision).

Based on his conservative and pragmatic estimates, he indicates that we should be considering an immediate tax on the emissions of carbon dioxide (the so-called "carbon tax"), which would significantly drive up the current price of coal and other fossil fuels, and to continue increasing said tax gradually, until it is doubled in 2030. Another option would severely restrict or prohibit emissions from power plants based on coal (which the Obama administration recently restricted in the U.S., but China has not even considered).

Ecuadorian Climate Change Strategy

Ecuador's government developed a national strategy to tackle climate change (http://goo.gl/8t5o76). According to the document, the most severe impacts that will affect Ecuador are the following: 
  • the intensification of extreme weather events such as those that occur due to the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) phenomenon; 
  • the rise in the sea level; 
  • the glacier retreat in the snow-capped mountains of the Sierra; 
  • the decrease in rainfall on agricultural land (runoff); 
  • the increased transmission of dengue and other tropical diseases; 
  • the expansion of populations of invasive species in Galapagos and other sensitive ecosystems of continental Ecuador; and 
  • the extinction of species.
A worrisome example of extinction would be the disappearance of bees, which would affect agriculture and wildlife in general (quoted in El Comercio http://goo.gl/jmzrlj).

Paradoxically, there will be excessive rainfall in areas prone to flooding (such as the Coast), and drought in other areas (such as the Sierra). The IPCC estimates that the magnitude of El Niño is likely to increase, and rainfall in the equatorial waters of the Pacific will increase significantly.

Melting glaciers in the snow-capped mountains would affect the provision of drinking water for cities, especially in the Sierra, and could also affect hydropower generation. The glaciers are estimated to have already shrunk by 30 % since 1950. Between 1960 and 2006, the temperature in Ecuador also increased on average by 0.8 degrees C; rainfall levels increased by 33% in the Coast; 66% of natural disasters in the country are associated with rainfall, while 12% of the population lives in areas subject to flooding. The Strategy estimates that the country could face annual losses of $ 5,600 million from 2025 on, as a result of global warming, if mitigation measures are not adopted (p. 67 of the National Strategy).

The Ecuadorian government has submitted proposals to the “Conference of the Parties” on climate change (the last one, COP 19, was held in November in Warsaw, Poland), including the following: creating incentives for those who avoid emissions (e.g., leaving the crude in the ground, such as the now abandoned Yasuni initiative); recognizing the "rights of nature", as does the Montecristi Constitution; and the "Socio Bosque" plan to generate incentives for conservation of forests and vulnerable ecosystems.

Policies to address global warming

It is necessary to reduce the consumption of fossil fuels (oil, coal), and other energy sources that emit greenhouse gases. This can be achieved in three ways:

a) Increasing energy efficiency, i.e. reducing the amount of energy required to produce the same amount of goods and services;

b) Promoting savings, recycling, a civic culture to turn off the light and water when not being consumed, including the adoption of automated mechanisms to regulate the use of such services (as is common today in European hotels and buildings, for example).

c) Promoting clean energy sources such as hydropower, solar, wind, tidal, etc.

Environmentalists and international organizations have recommended the removal of fuel subsidies that prevail in many countries (especially oil exporters, including Ecuador), and rather establishing a "carbon tax" that would capture the cost of the negative externality that GHG emissions represent. If the price of fossil fuels increases significantly, consumers will definitely seek alternatives (which, on the other hand, could affect Ecuador on the income side).

It is also imperative to take adaptation and mitigation measures, such as not allowing construction in coastal areas prone to flooding; adopt strong regulations regarding construction in the land management plans, to prevent natural disasters; create barriers, dikes, walls containment and other mechanisms to reduce the risk of natural disasters; adopting clean technologies; and, in an extreme case, the possibility of adopting "geo-engineering" measures have been mentioned, such as launching particles into space that reflect sunlight .

There are grant and concessional resources available to developing countries to address climate change (the so-called "climate finance"), including multilateral development banks like the World Bank, the IDB and the European Investment Bank; the Global Environment Facility (GEF); the European Union; several bilateral development agencies (e.g., KfW, AFD, AECID, etc.). A new Green Climate Fund (GCF) is also been established. Unfortunately, the assistance offered by the U.S. government to Ecuador was suspended, following the government's refusal to sign the Copenhagen Declaration.


HOW TO SAVE ENERGY WHILE REDUCING EMISSIONS

Interview with Jorge Luis Hidalgo, General Manager of Greenpower and Business Development Manager of Carbon Masters Ltd Ecuador

How can the analysis of carbon footprint measurement contribute to the decrease in energy subsidies in the country?

The problem of climate change is not only an environmental issue but also a problem of economics, energy security and sustainability. Many organizations in Latin America, and particularly in Ecuador, are still not clear on what the opportunities and benefits are of an evaluation of the impact of their carbon footprint, as well as an analysis of how to reduce the carbon emissions within your organization.

Some think that the issue of climate change is something remote, but the reality is that it is not far off. If we adopted a State policy to promote efforts to reduce our carbon emissions, we could also help the Ecuadorian economy.

For this purpose, it is important to analyze the economic impact generated by energy prices (mainly hydrocarbons) and especially the level of subsidies spent in the country.
According to the Central Bank of Ecuador, in 2012 slightly more than 9 million barrels of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) were consumed, for a value of approximately 645 million dollars; in subsidies for LPG the same year an amount of $560 million was spent, and only 10 % of the total is produced in Ecuador, so there is a significant outflow of resources.

Another even more worrisome example is diesel: in 2012, a little more than 17 million barrels were consumed, representing $2.3 billion. Which meant that only in subsidies in the same year $1.9 billion was spent, and we only have capacity to produce up to 40 % of diesel that the country needs. The rest is imported and also represents an outflow of funds. The total fuel subsidies in 2012 were $3.1 billion.

Many associate these subsidies with transportation and vehicles, but there are other important factors to analyze. Currently 45% of our electricity comes from thermal power, i.e. the burning of hydrocarbons. Most of the country's industries are subsidized except the ceramic, mining and oil sectors. In fact, in the industrial sector several companies require over $3 million dollars a year in subsidies.

If you think that as an individual you are not affected significantly by the subsidies, you should think again. The State can "give" the average family $ 1,000 to $ 3,000 in subsidized fuel for their vehicles in a year.

The problem is compounded when we look at population growth, industrial growth, and the increasing dependency on new technological applications. For example, an iPhone can consume more energy than a refrigerator in a year.

However, why not turn a "problem" into an opportunity? The first thing we do when facing a medical condition is to request that diagnostic tests be made. That is exactly what they do in Europe and other countries with regards to energy and emissions. These "tests" that are needed to analyze energy consumption are the "Carbon Footprint" analysis. From an energy audit for industries and organizations, we can begin to discover excellent opportunities for energy efficiency and cost efficiency.

As the saying goes, do good by doing well. But what can organizations do after measuring their carbon footprint?

Our advice is to start the journey towards a low carbon future, to reduce risks and generate environmental benefits, both at the firm level and at the macroeconomic level.

Our proposal is based on three main objectives:

1.    Energy efficiency (reduction of operating costs)

• Identify the parts of the operation or the production chain that generate emissions more intensively. An obvious example is the replacement of bulbs with energy saving bulbs.

2.  Use of energy resources that are friendlier to the environment and are within an economic logic.

• For example a change in highly carbon-intensive fuels such as burnt oil, bunker, diesel and LPG, to Natural Gas, which in addition to offering lower costs (up to 70% cost reduction), is also less intensive in GHG emissions than other hydrocarbons.

3.      Renewable Energy Sources

• There is much debate about the costs of renewable energy production. Nevertheless, there are economically attractive alternatives. For example, I consider that the national government is making a wise investment in hydropower, but there is much to be done in the production of biogas, solar energy, thermal power, wind, etc.

For Ecuador, it is strategic to redouble efforts to encourage industries and the general public to reduce their carbon footprint. This would generate cost efficiencies, reduce subsidies and have a lower environmental impact. It is for this reason that Carbon Masters (energy consultant) and Greenpower (engineering and technological change) are allied companies that are committed to helping the country and the industries in this endeavor.