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Bases for the Andean Energy Alliance
The First Meeting of the Council of Andean
Community Ministers of Energy, Electricity,
Hydrocarbons and Mines, held in Quito in
January 2004, defined the bases for the Andean
Energy Alliance (AEA), to be established
through efforts in 5 areas:
1. Construction of energy (electricity and
gas) markets integrated through harmonized
physical systems and regulatory frameworks;
2. Positioning in international hydrocarbon
markets in a strategic context of energy
security;
3. Promotion in the Andean countries of
entrepreneurial development of “energy
clusters”;
4. Framework for the negotiation and
classification of energy services in the WTO
and other international organizations; and
5. Development of the renewable energy sources
theme and its tie-in with the environmental
theme and with the Integral Plan for Social
Development (IPSD).
Electric interconnection
Decision
536 “General framework for subregional
interconnection of electric power systems and
intra-Community exchange of electricity”,
approved in December 2002, gave the Community
a legal framework for promoting the
development of the electricity theme among the
Member Countries.
As a result of this Decision, the Andean
Committee of Electric Service Policy-Setting
and Regulatory Agencies (CANREL) set to work
with its Technical Groups: i) Working Group of
Electric Service Regulatory Agencies (GTOR),
formed in June 2003 to formulate proposals for
advancing the harmonization of regulatory
frameworks needed for full Subregional
interconnection of electric power systems and
intra-Community exchange of electricity; and
ii) Working Group of Electric Service
Policy-Setting Agencies (GOPLAN), created in
January 2004 to draw up proposals, coordinate
efforts with Andean energy and electric power
institutions and reach agreements for
fulfilling aspects of information access and
coordinated project planning, with a view to
the region’s integration.
The electric systems of Colombia and Ecuador
were interconnected in March 2003 pursuant to
this Decision, and produced important benefits
for both Member Countries.
With the interconnection and full operation of
the electric systems of Colombia and Ecuador,
the interconnection of Colombian and
Venezuelan electric lines, and the forthcoming
electric interconnection of Peru and Ecuador
--all as a result of Decision 536 , “General
Framework for Subregional interconnection of
electric power systems and intra-Community
exchange of electricity,”-- the Andean
electricity market has reached its first level
of integration. It should be added here that
Bolivia announced in July 2005 that it had
decided to adhere to that Community Decision.
Gas interconnection
The Action Plan of the Andean Council of
Ministers of Energy, Electricity, Hydrocarbons
and Mines gave special priority to develop the
gas theme in the Subregion. The Chairman of
that Council of Ministers, in coordination
with the General Secretariat of the Andean
Community, accordingly called the First
Meeting of the Ad Hoc Group for Gas Matters,
which took place in Lima on November 13 and
14, 2003. International organizations directly
concerned with gas, like OLADE, ECLAC, IDB and
CAF, took special part in that meeting.
As a result of the meeting, it was decided to
advance the execution of a working plan drawn
from the document especially prepared by ECLAC
for the meeting, which contains the following
recommendations:
a) With binational integration processes as a
starting point, move ahead with criteria that
are not only economic, but also have a strong
social component and that are aimed at
long-term integral development. It is
advisable to gradually build up an
infrastructure system that will progressively
improve the people’s quality of life and
contribute to that development. Therefore,
these strategies should emphasize mechanisms
that facilitate the access of poor sectors to
clean and efficient energy sources like gas
and electricity, in that way coinciding with
the basic principles of sustainable
development.
b) Respect the natural role of regional
international organizations with broad
experience on the subject by reinforcing that
role.
c) Work on the orderly definition of an agenda
of tentative efforts to induce the Member
Countries to participate creatively in
coordinating this long-term vision and its key
objectives.
It was agreed at the First Meeting of the
Council of Andean Community Ministers of
Energy, Electricity, Hydrocarbons and Mines to
create the Permanent Group of National Experts
on Gas, whose main responsibilities are:
a) Conduct studies of the potential demand for
gas up to the year 2030, with realistic
hypotheses and contrasting scenarios. Integral
methodologies would be employed to consider
demand within each country by regions and by
homogeneous consumption or user groups, in
order to determine foreseeable penetrations
and the relative price conditions that would
tend to ensure forecast fulfillment. Emphasis
would be placed on the access of the poor and
a territorial and industrial vision of
development would be used to facilitate the
global integration of markets and centers of
population in order to stem the spread of
poverty in major cities.
b) Based on the findings of these studies,
analyze the range of feasible, necessary and
advisable interconnections, determining the
entry dates and the investments required.
c) Make audits of each country’s reserves,
establishing the foreseeable supply and demand
balances and estimating the reserves each
country needs to discover, in order to
evaluate the cost/benefits and balances among
them and the supply security, vis-à-vis the
advantages of integration.
d) Outline and move ahead with agreements on
financing mechanisms, price policies and trust
fund management, in order to ensure upstream
and downstream investments. State-owned
corporations can contribute to this objective
by using oil revenues rationally.
e) Establish administrative mechanisms and the
responsibilities of the future regional
supranational regulating agency or equivalent
body.
f) Analyze methodologies for rate-setting and
rules for the open access, supply security,
competition, and protection of investments of
users, in order to establish in the mid term
the initial drafts of the common regulatory
frameworks to be studied in depth and
negotiated by the different countries and
actors in the system.
“Energy clusters”
Unlike trade in primary and secondary forms of
energy --a typical commodities trade-- , whose
prices have followed a downward trend of long
standing, trade in energy services and in the
capital goods required for the industry enjoy
larger profit margins. These are high value
added goods and services.
Therein lies the importance of devising
strategies for energy-based participation in
the world economy that go beyond taking
advantage of primary and secondary energy
trade opportunities to assume an energy
cluster approach.
No systematic information is available today
in the Andean countries that breaks down
energy cluster activities sufficiently and at
the same time makes their interrelationship
possible.
It was for that reason that the First Meeting
of the Council of Andean Community Ministers
of Energy, Electricity, Hydrocarbons and
Mines, held in Quito in January 2004 gave
priority to this area of work and agreed that
UNCTAD would provide technical assistance for
its development.
Renewable energy
sources and their tie-in with the
Environmental theme and with the Integral Plan
for Social Development (IPSD)
The First Meeting of the Council of Andean
Community Ministers of Energy, Electricity,
Hydrocarbons and Mines underscored the
importance of linking up renewable energy
sources with the implementation of the Andean
Community’s Integral Plan for Social
Development (IPSD). The launching of studies
was proposed to give special priority to the
use of renewable energy sources in antipoverty
programs and to foster access to basic
services and their intensive use for meeting
energy requirements in border, isolated and
rural areas and, in general, of the population
lacking energy sources.
The First Meeting of energy and environment
experts on the topic of renewable energy
sources, held in Lima in May 2004, for its
part, identified the following criteria for
deepening the analysis of renewable energy
sources in the Subregion:
a. The Subregion’s renewable energy potential
can play a key role in the world energy system
by guaranteeing sustainable development and
its ability to create new forms of cooperation
among developing countries and between these
and developed countries within the context of
international environmental conservation
commitments.
b. New strategies and policies must be put
into play that will allow for rational use of
endogenous energy sources and enable new and
renewable sources to contribute to the
security of the energy supply, while
considering the particular needs of the
individual Member Countries.
c. Renewable energy sources constitute an
asset for negotiation and their development
can open up new opportunities for investment
in local and regional development.
d. Despite the advances made in electricity
coverage in the Andean Subregion, nearly 22
million people continue to live in isolated
communities without electrical services.
Renewable energy sources can help enormously
to provide those communities with sustainable
of electric power and other forms of energy.
e. Inasmuch as access to energy sources helps
improve the living conditions of people in the
Subregion, it is essential to link up this
theme with the formulation and implementation
of the Integral Plan for Social Development (IPSD
/ Decision 553), in keeping with the United
Nations Millennium Development goals.
f. It is important to evaluate the role
renewable energy sources can play in the
provision of energy by and the productive
development of the integration hubs in which
the Andean Community is involved within the
framework of the South American Regional
Infrastructure Integration Initiative (IIRSA).
g. The Andean Community should play an active
role within the Johannesburg Renewable Energy
Coalition.
The meeting concluded by identifying the need
to lay the groundwork for a future Andean
Renewable Energy Strategy to be considered at
the next meeting of the Council of Andean
Ministers of Energy, Electricity, Hydrocarbons
and Mines and of the Andean Committee of
Environmental Authorities.
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