Institut Veolia Environnement

Energy, environment and development - Analysing opportunities for reducing poverty

From december 14 to 16 in Bangalore, India

The conference will focus on challenges for sustainable development that arise from the nexus between energy, environment, and poverty. It will provide an opportunity for researchers, policymakers, practitioners, and the donor community to engage in constructive dialogue on possible solutions. It will attempt to identify an agenda for action and policy relevant research, particularly focusing on developing countries in Asia.

Conference Themes

The conference will have six themes, each having specific topics as described below. All themes focus on the linkages between energy, environment, and development. All are long-term issues which require balanced enquiry and careful analysis in terms of present and future development pathways. Some of the topics relate to relatively less studied questions on which the conference could focus global attention and act as a catalyst for action.

Theme I: Energy - the "missing MDG"?

This session will discuss how energy policies can create opportunities for the poor, promote employment generation in rural areas, and reduce the negative environmental effects of current energy development? Which initiatives have been successful on the ground? How have the Johannesburg partnerships for sustainable development fared? Can these lead to self-reinforcing long-term improvements in standards of living?

Theme II: Sustainable lifestyles

This session will focus on topics such as patterns of energy use in food production or waste generation, modification of consumption patterns, and sustainable urban mobility.

Theme III: Local dimensions of global environmental challenges

This session will focus on issues of equity, livelihoods, and access to common property resources, conflicts arising from water scarcity and threats to food security, and linkages between climate change adaptation and the Millennium Development Goals.

Theme IV: Globalization - forces of change

This session will tackle issues of energy access in this changing global scenario. What conditions are essential to ensure that globalisation and economic growth translate into reduced inequities? What business models are needed to enhance access of the rural poor to energy and other services? How should we combine technology innovation, local empowerment, and adaptation of existing knowledge and experience to suit local needs to provide goods and services that enhance their productivity?

Theme V: Technological leapfrogging

This session will address issues of technology adaptation, building capability, ensuring financial and physical access, and policy frameworks that facilitate technology adoption.

Theme VI: Revitalizing research and development

This session will address such questions as how effective the R&D institutions have been in servicing growth patterns in Asia, how the educational system would move to a satisfactory level of R&D and innovation. It will broadly aim to arrive at a roadmap for developing countries in general to move them towards higher S&T capacities and actions for sustainable development.

Advisory Committee

  • Malik Amin Aslam, Minister of State for Environment, Government of Pakistan
  • Benji Dorji, Advisor-National Environment Commission, Royal Government of Bhutan
  • Akio Morishima, Chair, Board of Directors, Institute of Global Environmental Strategies, Japan
  • Mohan Munasinghe, Chairman, Munasinghe Institute for Development, Sri Lanka
  • R K Pachauri, Director-General TERI and Chairman Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
  • Emil Salim, Former Minister for Population and Environment, Indonesia
  • Amartya Sen, Nobel Laureate, and Lamont University Professor and Professor of Economics and Philosophy, Harvard University
  • Farooq Sobhan, President, Bangladesh Enterprise Institute, Bangladesh
  • Georges Valentis, Managing Director, Institute Veolia Environment, France
  • Zhongyuan Lu, Director-General of Dept. of Macroeconomic Research of the Development Research Center, China