Members of the Murut indigenous group in Sabah working on installing a micro hydro turbine in Borneo. |
KOTA KINABALU, MALAYSIA (8th Oct 2012): Community-based
solutions and cost effective, reliable models for generating renewable
electricity are among features of a regional assembly in Sabah, Malaysian
Borneo, that will do its part in creating a sustainable energy secure future
for the planet.
The five-day Southeast Asia Renewable
Energy People’s Assembly (SEAREPA) that starts on Oct 29 at the Rainforest
Discovery Centre in Sandakan will also explore an array of renewable energy
technologies and methodologies.
“The Assembly will showcase innovative
approaches of renewable energy pioneers, address issues affecting communities
impacted by large-scale energy projects and galvanize investment in clean
energy. It also aims to influence policy by integrating decentralized clean
energy projects into development plans.
“This is an open space forum where stories,
struggles and solutions surrounding power generation can be heard. The demand
for energy in Southeast Asia is placing severe pressure on natural resources and
is displacing rural communities as demand is largely met through coal plants and
large scale hydro dams,” Wynn said in a statement to announce the event.
Colombian children examine a miniature ram pump built by Filipino organization AIDFI (Alternative Indigenous Development Foundation Inc.) |
About a hundred people are expected at
SEAREPA, with confirmations from groups in Malaysia, Indonesia, the
Philippines, Thailand, Myanmar, Vietnam and Laos, including strong
participation from the Bornean states of Sabah, Sarawak and Kalimantan. Joining
them are representatives from India and the United States.
Among them are the Renewable Energy
Association of Myanmar, micro-hydro practitioners IBEKA from Indonesia, the
Mekong Delta Development Research Institute of Vietnam, the Lao Institute for
Renewable Energy and the Alternative Indigenous Development Foundation (AIDFI)
from the Philippines.
Wynn said distributed renewable energy
projects have demonstrated cost-effective, equitable, reliable and
environmentally conscious models for generating power, and that at this point,
it is a matter of scaling them up.
He said the idea for SEAREPA evolved from a
successful grassroots campaign to halt a coal-fired power plant in Sabah, and
is additionally driven by the need for a more effective process towards
addressing local demand for energy and the global problem of climate change.
“SEAREPA has been designed to stand apart
from conventional energy and climate change conferences. Rather than following
a strict agenda, the discussions will be driven by and tailored to the specific
ideas and interests of the participants themselves,” he said.
Professor of Energy Daniel M. Kammen, who
led a research team over two years ago to make a case for distributed energy in
Sabah, is also attending the event, apart from representatives of Pacific
Environment and International Accountability Project.
The registration fee is based on the carbon
footprint of travel, with money collected going towards a fund for the organisation
that demonstrates commitment on mitigating climate change through renewable
energy.
“One other criteria we are looking for is
the ability of the selected organisation to ensure the project’s resilience by
integrating water or energy access with community enterprise, sustainable
resource management and restoration,” Wynn said.
Experienced facilitators from Indonesia,
the Philippines, Australia and Malaysia will keep discussions flowing at the
event.
SEAREPA is co-hosted by Land Empowerment
Animals People (LEAP), TONIBUNG (Sabah-based Friends of Village Development),
Green Empowerment and the Rainforest Discovery Centre (RDC).
Wynn said limited places are still
available for local participants, and that queries can be sent to admin@searepa.com.
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