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New windows and insulation can reduce energy use by 50%. |

Energy efficiency chief Tasko Ermenkov: programme benefits 30,000 homes. |
In the suburbs of the pretty Bulgarian capital of Sofia, communist-era
apartment blocks are developing odd façades. New insulation panels installed
on the outside of some apartments make them appear to stick out from the flats
above, below and beside them. Others are acquiring new, air-tight,
energy-efficient windows, looking sharply modern compared to the neighbours’
draughty older windows.
It’s all about saving energy at the household level. Flats built in socialist
times were poorly constructed, with little insulation to keep heat in and cold
out, but that didn’t bother residents. Electricity and heat were supplied in
abundance by centralised municipal systems and funded almost entirely by the
state, so no one worried about conserving energy, even in the bitter winter
months.
Times have changed and consumers now have to cover their own utility bills as
well as funding household improvements to reduce energy costs.
And so energy efficiency is catching on, thanks to the stick of rising fuel
prices and the carrot of €50 million in EBRD-backed loans and €10 million in
donor support for energy improvements in homes.
Burning fuel and money
It’s all part of the drive to cut the huge amount of energy wasted in
Bulgaria, be it in draughty homes and public buildings or in outdated factory
production processes. Bulgaria remains one of the most energy-intensive
countries in the region: it uses at least twice the amount of energy consumed
in western European countries to produce each unit of GDP, according to 2003
figures from the International Energy Agency.
“Energy efficiency is an important part of improving the socio-economic
conditions of Bulgaria’s people who otherwise pay too much to stay warm in
winter,” says EBRD President Jean Lemierre. “We have to help rein in the waste
of energy that is a legacy of the command economy across the EBRD countries of
operation. Bulgaria is leading the way.”
“Households can achieve 40-50 per cent energy savings just through changing
their homes’ windows or insulation,” says Tasko Ermenkov, head of Bulgaria’s
energy efficiency agency. “A wider variety of energy efficiency measures can
yield 70% savings.”
Closing nuclear units
The residential energy efficiency programme builds on Bulgaria’s agreement
with western European states and the European Community (EC) to close four of
its Kozloduy nuclear power units considered unsafe by the international
community. In support of this agreement the EC, certain of its member states
and Switzerland funded the Kozloduy International Decommissioning Support
(KIDS) Fund which currently has €255 million in commitments. Consequent to the
decision to close the four nuclear units the fund, managed by the EBRD,
assists Bulgaria with other pressing energy issues including efficiency and
necessary restructuring, upgrading and modernisation of the energy production,
transmission and distribution sectors.
The EBRD uses small loans to homeowners combined with grants from the KIDS
Fund to help Bulgaria ‘find’ new energy by reducing energy losses. Cutting
energy costs helps the country to improve its competitiveness and reduce the
environmental impact of its economic growth, according to Terry McCallion, the
EBRD banker who established the residential credit lines.
“Once the household improvements are done and independently verified, each
homeowner gets a KIDS grant of up to 20 per cent of their project costs,” says
Zoltan Kiss, KIDS Fund manager.
Waste not, want not
The EBRD funds are loaned at market rates via four Bulgarian banks to
homeowners installing new windows, insulation, heat pumps, solar water heaters
and/or efficient gas boilers. The credit line also finances households to
switch to renewable fuels including wood waste and wood pellets (abundant in
well-forested Bulgaria), cherry pits from a local jam company, and sunflower
seed shells from a vegetable oil manufacturer.
The renewable energy equipment supplier, Erato, says its ultra-efficient
burners pay for themselves in less than three years because, at two euro cents
per kilowatt hour, the locally-produced fuel is half the price of imported
fuels, particularly natural gas.
“Overall this finance programme is a promotional action which should bring
benefit to 30,000 households across Bulgaria. It won’t solve the whole problem
but will build a lot of awareness,” says Mr Ermenkov. His government is
developing a similar rebate programme to further push energy efficiency in
households and public buildings, with €350 million from state coffers.
“I’m glad that western European countries, the EC and the EBRD have helped
us,” Mr Ermenkov adds. “Through this programme the EBRD has achieved some real
innovations in finance here, both as a financial institution and as KIDS Fund
manager.”
Written by Kate Dunn, EBRD’s Senior Writer.
Contact:
EBRD Bank lending Tel: +44 20 7338 6554 Fax: +44 20 7338 6119 Email:
mccallit@ebrd.com
Kozloduy Fund at EBRD Tel: +44 20 7338 6897 Fax: +44 20 7338
7175 Email: goldspip@ebrd.com
8 February 2006
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