"5th Nexus Forum" on the Climate-Energy Security Nexus: Policies and Practices to Enhance Energy Sector Resilience
Background
Climate change could affect our energy systems, and thereby our energy security, in several ways: by altering energy demand, disrupting energy supply and damaging energy infrastructure. To deal with these threats, the energy sector needs to develop resilience through technological solutions, flexible management practices as well as preventive emergency preparedness and response measures. To facilitate these processes and enhance their effectiveness, policy and institutional responses will be needed.
The IEA hosted the 5th Forum on the Climate-Energy Security Nexus: Policies and Practices to Enhance Energy Sector Resilience in Paris. The workshop focused on the policy responses that could facilitate energy sector resilience, and considered the potential role that government, businesses, and organisations can play in enhancing energy sector planning and resilience building through regulations, guidelines, and partnerships.
Over 70 participants from Europe, China, Japan, Korea, the Philippines, the United States, Canada, Mexico, Brazil, and South Africa attended the workshop. Participants represented national, regional, and local governments, businesses and industry, scientific institutions, and international organisations.
The workshop focused on the policy responses that could facilitate energy sector resilience, and considered the potential role that government, businesses, and organisations can play in enhancing energy sector planning and resilience building through regulations, guidelines, and partnerships.
1. Welcome and opening remarks
- Maria van der Hoeven, Executive Director, International Energy Agency (IEA)
- Nicholas Bridge, British Ambassador and Permanent Representative to the OECD & IEA
2. Emerging policy space: energy sector adaptation to climate change
- Alice C. Hill, United States White House
- Noé van Hulst, Permanent Representative of the Netherlands to the OECD & IEA
- Ding Ding, National Climate Change Strategy and International Cooperation Center, China
- Joan MacNaughton, World Energy Council Trilemma
3. Climate change science
4. Government policies and initiatives to enhance resilience of the energy system (demand, supply, infrastructure) to gradual and extreme changes in climate
- Yann Françoise, City of Paris
- Baltazar S. Tribunalo Jr., Cebu Resilience Task Force, Philippines
- Mary-Ann Wilson, Natural Resources Canada
- Kazushige Tanaka, Permanent Delegation of Japan to the OECD & IEA
- Andrew Robertson, IEA
5. Business and investment players’ practices to improve climate change resilience of their assets, operations, and investments
- Djamila Amimer, Shell
- Jean-Yves Caneill, Électricité de France (EDF)
- Craig Davies, European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD)
- Rowan Douglas, Willis Group & Willis Research Network
6. Role of international stakeholders and processes in developing resilience awareness, policies and approaches
- Yunus Arikan, ICLEI
- Lijin Zhong, World Resources Institute (China)
- John Harding, UNISDR
- Matti Goldberg, UNFCCC
7. Closing remarks
- Didier Houssin, Director, Sustainable Energy Policy and Technology, IEA
Related links:
- Nexus Summary
- "4th Nexus Forum" on Climate-Energy Security Nexus: Water and Energy
- "3rd Nexus Forum" on Climate-Energy Security Nexus: Electricity Sector Resilience
- Water and Energy Nexus - Levina Hattori Presentation to the Round Table on the Water – Energy – Food Nexus, September 2014
- World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD)
- IEA Climate Change Topic page