Skip to main content
ENES

Search the Bretton Woods Project site

Clean energy targets for the World Bank

A fully referenced version of this briefing can be viewed as a PDF.

As the World Bank reviews its energy strategy and the deadlines for its clean energy targets approach, this paper questions what the World Bank counts as clean energy and whether it reports on its energy lending in an accountable way. The concerns set out below demonstrate the need for a far more rigorous and transparent approach, subject to independent monitoring.

In 2008, the World Bank committed to make half of its energy investments ‘low carbon’ by 2011. Last year the UK government went further, calling for 60 per cent of the Bank’s energy portfolio to comprise ‘clean energy investments’ by 2012. That target has since been endorsed by Denmark.

These targets fall short of the recommendations of the Bank’s 2004 Extractive Industries Review, which included phasing out investment in new coal mining and oil production, to “concentrate its lending on activities that reduce pollution and greenhouse gas emissions”. Many civil society organisations argue that the Bank should go even further and shift away from all support to fossil fuels, so that its limited resources can be devoted to clean energy.

Whether or not they are sufficiently ambitious, for the targets to be meaningful, they must be based on robust classifications and transparent reporting practices.

Among the key concerns highlighted in this paper are:

Clean energy: what counts?

The Bank claims that renewable energy and energy efficiency exceeded 40 per cent of its total energy lending of $8.2 billion in financial year 2009. However, much of that investment went to energy projects that are arguably neither renewable nor low-carbon. The following section highlights contentious elements of the Bank’s energy definitions. The UK government has not yet developed its own framework to judge progress towards its target for the Bank, despite the approaching deadline, and uses the Bank’s definitions by default.

Transparent reporting?

In addition, there are a number of concerns about the way the Bank reports on its energy portfolio.

This briefing has focussed on how the Bank reports on clean energy, but there are other concerns with its energy portfolio reporting that fall outside the scope of this paper. For example, in low-income countries the Bank counts all power generation, transmission and distribution projects as contributing to increasing energy access for the poor. This would therefore include large-scale, export-oriented projects that are accused of having limited benefits in terms of improving energy access among poor and rural communities.

Conclusion

The energy strategy review is a crucial opportunity for the World Bank to begin a transformation of its energy lending, so that it focuses on increased access to energy and low-carbon development. As part of this, it must adopt robust categories for its energy portfolio and clear, consistent reporting practices. These should be subject to independent monitoring to ensure that it is making genuine progress towards supporting clean energy.

By setting targets for the World Bank, the UK and other shareholder governments have signalled that they wish to play a leading role in its transformation to a low-carbon development institution. They must now push the Bank to meet those targets without using definitions or reporting that obscure the figures.