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Page added on November 6, 2013

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Crowfunding for Renewables: Game Changer?

Crowfunding for Renewables: Game Changer? thumbnail

Crowdfunding of renewable energy projects is growing fast in Europe. If this grassroots movement gets organized in time to access the big money available in the next round of cohesion funding, it could have far reaching effects on the European energy sector.

In recession era Europe, much talk is of ‘innovative’ or ‘alternative’ financing for sustainable energy – meaning money other than the public purse. In 2012 crowdfunding in Europe saw an estimated 65 % growth compared to 2011 and reached €735 million. With industry insiders Massolution forecasting an 81 % increase in global crowdfunding volumes in 2013, it looks like crowdfunding might just get serious.

Crowdfunding has several things going for it compared to traditional funding, as was noted recently in a report published by the European Capacity Building Initiative. First, crowdfunding can provide finance to small business and community organizations otherwise excluded from formal finance. This support for entrepreneurship is also touted as a leading advantage by lobby group European Crowdfunding NetworkSpeed in mobilising funding is a another characteristic of crowdfunding– as neatly demonstrated in the recent new world record where  €1.3 million was raised in just 13 hours by selling shares in a wind turbine to 1700 Dutch households in a deal brokered by Windcentrale. Risk-taking, necessary for marketing novel renewable energy products which still need to be tested in large scale, can also be addressed by crowd sourced finance as it taps into a more risk-tolerant segment of lenders or investors.

Cooperatives

Accelerated through social media and online communication, crowdfunding is a financial power tool for energy cooperatives.

To realize the ambitions of local sustainable energy plans, ‘community finance’ – which may be regarded as a form of crowdfunding – could be a big part of the solution.  Given the speed with which both crowdfunding and the energy cooperative sector are expanding (the number of European energy grew cooperatives grew from 1200 last year to some 2000 this year), community-financed cooperatives could seriously shake up the energy market in many countries.

Energy cooperatives have perhaps been most successful so far in Denmark. According to Dirk Vansintjan of Belgian renewable energy cooperative Ecopower, ‘For Danes, it is the natural way of organizing themselves. Since the Middle Ages they’ve been doing it, and today most renewable projects in the country are organized this way.’

Germany too is a leader in the field of community energy, with 65 % of its renewable energy capacity community-owned. There are over 600 energy cooperatives in Germany, the number having increased tenfold in the period from 2000-2010.

Despite a long tradition of cooperatives, Spain just gained its first in the energy sector – Som Energia. By June 2013, this cooperative had 8000 members and had invested more than €3 million in renewable energy production projects – an impressive result in an acutely recession-struck country in less than two years.

In the UK, where rising household energy prices are hitting the headlines and energy is set to become a major election issue in May 2015, local energy cooperatives are seen as a way to combat the monopoly of the ‘Big Six’ – Britain’s biggest energy suppliers.  The movement is supported by some local authorities, such as Cornwall County Council which has made a €1.2 million revolving loan fund available to help community groups build local renewable energy installations.  Also at the forefront of this work is Cornish energy charity Community Energy Plus. Energy advisor Neil Farrington  says, ‘We are currently working with fifteen community energy cooperatives across Cornwall with more emerging every few weeks.’

In Croatia, the UNDP (United Nations Development Programme) plans to develop a crowdfunding platform for community energy projects and has issued a call for cooperatives to submit project proposals. According to Mak Đukan and Robert Pašičko of the UNDP Environmental Governance program in Croatia, design of the UNDP crowdfunding platform  will incorporate the best elements of crowdfunding platforms specifically designed to support renewable energy projects, such as Solar Schools, Abundance Generation, Sun Funder and Solar Mosaic.

Cohesion funding

If matched or leveraged with other funding, community finance could become a much bigger player in Europe’s energy transition. And it just so happens that between now and next summer, there is a brief window of opportunity to access a big pot of money – upwards of €20 billion in fact. This is the ballpark figure of what will be allocated to investments in energy efficiency and renewable energy in the next funding period of the EU Cohesion Funds for 2014-2020.

Cohesion funds are part of the EU budget aimed at reducing regional disparities in terms of income, wealth and opportunities. How the money is spent at national level is determined by negotiation between the Commission and the national Managing Authority.  This is made formal through Partnership Agreements (essentially overarching national strategies, setting out plans for use of the funds) and Operational Programmes (setting out a region’s priorities for delivering the funds). The point is, the negotiation process is taking place now, and for local sustainable energy leaders to have a shot at the money, they need to be aware of and influencing this process.

Whether or not this can happen depends on a number of factors – for example how transparent or opaque the national managing authority is in public consultation, the degree of support and involvement from local authorities and perhaps most importantly, the willingness and capacity of localized initiatives to get to grips with the maze of bureaucracy involved. But given that many energy cooperatives have tackled administrative and legal complexity in gaining grid access, they might just be able to handle this.

Earlier this month representatives from DG Regio (The European Commission’s Directorate-General for Regional Policy) and associations of local authorities discussed the potential for community sustainable energy projects to access cohesion funding.  It was concluded that although no precedents exist, there are no legal barriers for community finance to provide the private finance element needed to leverage the EU Cohesion funds.

To be first in this would be some achievement – and for now, the door is open. For example, community led local development is one of the new aspects of cohesion policy that could support voluntary and community organisations, and local authorities among others. Crucially, community led local development (CLLD) must be included in the – now in draft form – national Partnership Agreements. Unless the box is ticked for CLLD, community based crowdfunded initiatives and other third sector enterprises (like renewable energy cooperatives) cannot get access to the big money available through cohesion funding. The devil is in the details – but with billions of euro on the table, there’s a lot to play for. It will be 2021 by the time the next negotiation period rolls around. What will the energy landscape look like then?

CEO Peter Terium of RWE – one of Europe’s largest utilities – stated in 2012: ‘Our core markets are changing remarkably fast. Almost no other industry is currently undergoing such dynamic change as the energy sector…The success of this transformation of the energy industry will be decided at the local level.’

Can the upstarts join forces with the bureaucrats? If the local can get organized quickly enough, distributed energy could become a game-changer faster than we think.

Read more:

EU Cohesion policy support for sustainable energy

Structural and Investment funds 2014-2020

Renewable energy cooperatives

 

Energy Collective



16 Comments on "Crowfunding for Renewables: Game Changer?"

  1. GregT on Wed, 6th Nov 2013 11:43 pm 

    “In recession era Europe, much talk is of ‘innovative’ or ‘alternative’ financing for sustainable energy – meaning money other than the public purse.”

    There is only one source of energy on the planet Earth that is ‘sustainable’. The Sun. All other manmade energy sources, require finite resources, which require fossil fuels in their mining, refinement, manufacturing, and transportation. Most of those finite resources are also becoming harder to find, and more expensive to extract, even with fossil fuels.

    At best, alternate, electric power generation infrastructure, would only last for a few decades. It does, however, make much more sense to utilize the remainder of the fossil fuels, and other finite natural resources, on building out a transitional source of energy. At least we might be able to keep the lights on for a while longer, as society powers down back to the 1600s.

    It doesn’t, however, appear that we have enough time left, to actually do that.

  2. action on Wed, 6th Nov 2013 11:47 pm 

    If they were to eliminate Medicare, Medicaid, Social security, and half of the defense budget here in the United States, we’d have trillions for investing in the future, instead of investing in old people and bombs. Get over it people, it’s really not that great here, die and move on. Like Frankenstein keeping all these people alive past 80.

  3. GregT on Thu, 7th Nov 2013 1:01 am 

    action,

    Have you been drinking by any chance?

  4. BillT on Thu, 7th Nov 2013 1:04 am 

    Action, you may be lucky enough to live to ‘get old’. I hope not, if you have that attitude. 80 seems old to you, but it isn’t, IF you take care of your body the previous years.

    At 86, my dad flew half way round the world to visit me in the Philippines. He passed on at 88 of a stroke. He jumped into France on D-Day and saw his friends killed as they dropped. He taught me many of the things I talk about on here. I’m 69 and plan on a few more decades.

    You likely consume twice what I do, I suspect. So, maybe it is the West that should ‘just die’ so the other six billion can have more. After all, the West consumes over half of the resources and are less than 16% of the world’s population.

    Renewables are NOT renewable, as sunweb and others try to point out. But, you cannot tell someone something he/she does not want to hear. Renewables can, maybe, extend energy but they cannot replace hydrocarbon energy and maintain a world anything like the current one. Not even close. And THAT is a good thing. Adjust!

  5. GregT on Thu, 7th Nov 2013 2:02 am 

    BillT,

    My Father is 84, he still flies his Cessna 172, at least twice a week. Weather permitting.

  6. Norm on Thu, 7th Nov 2013 6:32 am 

    Well dad burns up gas then. flying thru the air. oh well. Back to crowd funding, what a fantastic idea !! Coupled to the symbiotic fact that a software engineer can send kilowatt-hours over Cat 5E cable from people who don’t need the kilowatt-hours, to people who do, then we now have a fantastic vision of the future!! How many kilowatts can you put onto Cat 5E ethernet anyway? Can I run my 1500 watt heater from the USB socket ? Right on! I am ready! Where do I crowd-fund it?

    So happy the USA has an energy plan now! Crowd funding, and a smart-grid !!

  7. Arthur on Thu, 7th Nov 2013 9:10 am 

    Yes, crowd funding is a game changer. It is possible for local small communities to invest in their own energy infrastructure and have direct return of investment. Villages of a few thousand that cough up a few thousand euro’s per individual to buy a 3MW wind turbine, that’s happening everywhere in Europe.

    http://deepresource.wordpress.com/2012/12/30/wilpoldsried-makes-millions-from-renewables/

  8. BillT on Thu, 7th Nov 2013 10:42 am 

    Norm, you need a touch of reality also. These are nothing but techie dreams that will never come to pass in any meaningful way. Tech can change lead to gold too, but it takes tens of thousands of dollars worth of energy to make a gram of gold. These ideas will end with the crash of the economy, never to be recovered. When? Stay tuned, the fiscal cliff is fast approaching for the West.

  9. Mike on Thu, 7th Nov 2013 10:52 am 

    Oh Arthur, you came and you made us all chortle!

  10. action on Thu, 7th Nov 2013 12:32 pm 

    Yea I was drinking, apologies for that and my other comments yesterday.

  11. GregT on Thu, 7th Nov 2013 2:21 pm 

    action,

    Understandable. I still angry from time to time as well. It’s part of the process of coming to grips with reality.

    It does get better though.

  12. J-Gav on Thu, 7th Nov 2013 4:50 pm 

    I wouldn’t entirely discount crowd-funding in some local environments amenable to it but come on, Arthur, it’s not happening “everywhere in Europe”.

    Actually, the typo in the title may have inadvertently hit on another solution! Crow-funding! I’ve been watching these clever birds lately and if we could just get them to deliver euros where they’re needed, when they’re needed, we might be on to something …

  13. Arthur on Thu, 7th Nov 2013 5:03 pm 

    “but come on, Arthur, it’s not happening “everywhere in Europe”.”

    http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2013/09/dutch-wind-turbine-purchase-sets-world-crowdfunding-record

    tinyurl . com/mx4bmef

    “The German Energiewende is the world’s most ambitious programme to move rapidly to a low carbon energy system. Although not without its problems, this transformation has means that Germany already gets 25% of its electricity from renewable sources. And the extent of citizen financial participation is striking. Almost half (46%) of the country’s renewable power capacity is currently owned by private citizens and farmers.

    Some crowd alright. Denmark, Spain, Italy, same story. For a large part the renewable energy revolution now underway in Europe is for a large part funded by private parties, ‘the crowd’ and not just by the government or corporations.

  14. Norm on Thu, 7th Nov 2013 10:59 pm 

    On your side, Bill, writing was in sarcastic mode. Crowd funding will not produce energy, only uze it. And a USB socket wont run a 1500 watt heater. Scariest of all, is 90% of Gen public does not know that. And 100% of Congress does not know that
    .

  15. BillT on Fri, 8th Nov 2013 1:27 am 

    Northern Europe is about the size of Texas. They brag but have nothing of value to contribute. Denmark is not Europe and Germany is broken, like the other EU countries. It is only a matter of time until there is no money for ‘funding’ anything not a life necessity. Wait and see, just like I am awaiting the strongest storm of the new century to hit Manila.

  16. Arthur on Fri, 8th Nov 2013 11:10 am 

    “Germany is broken”

    LOL. In September they had yet another absolute record in export surplus ($30B). Unemployment rate 5%. All the young unemployed from Greece and Spain are at least contemplating to move to Germany and many in fact do and find work.

    http://www.lewrockwell.com/2013/11/patrick-j-buchanan/tell-obama-to-take-a-hike/

    Germany is stronger than ever and with Germany at the core, Europe is going to take over the baton from the US as the number one economic power house and additionally will be the first to achieve the energy transition.

    P.S. good luck with the storm

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