FRIDAY 19 DECEMBER, 2008 |

IRENA - The IEA Of The Renewable Energy Sector
by Energy Matters
Many obstacles are still in the way of renewable energy achieving its full
potential. A lack of public awareness, governments continue to favour subsidising
polluting energy sources, ineffective political frameworks, poor technical
expertise and misinformation are all preventing renewable energy from meeting
the challenges of carbon-sodden world.
A new voice for the global renewable industry, The
International
Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA), will be launched on January
26, 2009 in Bonn, Germany with the goal of removing these obstacles. The first meeting of the Preparatory Commission will take place on 27 January 2009, the day after the Founding Conference.
All interested UN member states are invited to attend the Founding Conference and become founding members of IRENA
IRENA will work on behalf of the renewables sector to promote the
acceleration of
renewable
energy
uptake worldwide. The concept for was IRENA originally presented by EUROSOLAR and the World Council for Renewable Energy. It has been extensively
discussed for several years at various international level forums. IRENA's
original founding member countries are Germany, Spain and Denmark.
IRENA will offer practical advice and support for developed and developing countries,
assisting in the development of regulatory frameworks and the building of capacity. The agency will
provide relevant information including best practices, effective financial mechanisms and
also make available state-of-the-art technological
expertise.
In the 1970s, the oil shock experienced during that decade prompted the foundation
of the International Energy Agency (IEA). While the IEA is beginning to
acknowledge the
looming
Peak Oil crisis and the importance of the role of renewable energy in the
future, it is still very much widely seen as "old school", serving the
interests of the oil and coal industry. IRENA will provide the
solar
power,
wind
energy and other renewable sectors sectors their own dedicated
representative; lobbying on behalf of the sector to help ensure that renewables
receive the funding and support they deserve in countries throughout the
world.
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