Berlin, Germany - On 04 February 2010, Tonga and Serbia ratified the IRENA Statute, Denmark joined one day later on 05 February.
IRENA, together with the Governments’ of Denmark, Colombia and Costa Rica are organising this side event to to exchange lesson learnt, good practices and innovative solutions.
Under the auspices of the Marrakesh Partnership for Global Climate Action and in cooperation with the High-Level Climate Champions, IRENA took the lead in organising the event that aimed at catalysing and showcasing accelerated action to meet the goals of both the Paris Agreement and SDG 7 on sustainable energy.
The Energy Action Day, which took place ahead of the UN High-Level Dialogue on Energy, aimed to accelerate collective action towards net-zero and climate-resilient energy systems.
The third Renewables Talk meeting presented an opportunity for IRENA’s Permanent Representatives to share unique examples and experiences from their countries in their journeys towards carbon neutrality.
Innovation in technology, digitalisation and building efficiency are opening the heating sector to low-temperature renewables according to IRENA report.
The Danish Embassy in Abu Dhabi in cooperation with State of Green and the International Renewable Energy Agency, IRENA, hosted a joint webinar about global investments in renewable energy and climate projects. The webinar took place on Tuesday, 15 December 2020 from 12:00 to 13:00 (GST time zone).
This high-level event hosted by United Nations Group of Friends of Sustainable Energy (Norway, Denmark, Ethiopia and Pakistan) and supported by SDG 7 custodians agencies, presented findings of Tracking SDG 7: The Energy Progress Report (2020), as well as of the Policy Briefs by the SDG 7 Technical Advisory Group.
The workshop on ‘Sharing experiences in applying innovative solutions to achieve 100% renewable power systems’ was held online and connected representatives from countries to explore the most disruptive innovations enabling the rapid uptake of a high share of variable renewables in power systems by mid-century