WISIONS of Sustainability
Our mission is to empower individuals and communities to transform the production and use of energy so that it effectively enables sustainable development. Read more about WISIONS activities, goals and background.
News Blog
WISIONS Webinar on development of biodigester technology in Latin America and the Caribbean
News from WISIONS posted on December 5th, 2019

- What technological developments have been particularly important for adapting to the diverse conditions faced by farmers and other potential users of the technology in the region?
- How has the dissemination of the technology been promoted in the region?
- What role is the technology currently playing and what role could it play in the future in moving toward sustainable societies in LAC?
- What lessons from LAC are valuable for the development and application of the technology in other regions?
• Mariala Pino, General Coordinator of RedBioLAC
• Sam Schlesinger, Program Manager Ecuador, Green Empowerment
• Willington Ortiz, Regional Coordinator LAC, WISIONS Initiative, Wuppertal Institute
Moderator:
• Carmen Dienst, Head of Research Unit "International Energy Transition", Wuppertal Institute
Specific Objectives:

Recording of HPNET Webinar is now online!
News from WISIONS posted on December 12th, 2019


4th Edition of HPNETS Mini-Grids Webinar Series 2019
News from WISIONS posted on December 5th, 2019

Although mini-grids are often boxed as a “pre-electrification” intervention, there is increasing evidence showing that mini-grids can achieve grid parity. Further, in countries that allow mini-grids to feed in electricity to the central grid, mini-grids have actually made the central grid more reliable!
Hydro mini-grids especially meet these scenarios, providing 24-hour reliable electricity, typically at lower LCOE and costs per kW than most other types of mini-grids, and leading to lower tariffs for rural consumers. Thereof, hydro mini-grids are generally financially viable for motorized loads (e.g. agri processing productive end use) and for feeding into the central grid.
Despite their obvious advantages, in most developing contexts decentralized renewable energy mini-grids continue to be framed as “pre-electrification” solutions at par with solar home lighting, or “not as important as the central grid.” Often mini-grid development is housed in a separate and less influential ministry, while the central grid authorities have ultimate power and financial resources. Such a fragmented approach leads to:
- Redundant electrification interventions, and therefore wasteful use of funding resources;
- Confusion on timing of arrival of the central grid, which severely hampers the scale-up of mini-grids;
- Abandoned mini-grids and loss of investment upon the arrival of a reliable central grid;
- Business-as-usual of an intermittently reliable central grid, typically powered by fossil fuels or large hydro, in today’s age of climate crisis.
