Page 13 - Luce 2022
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Point of View







































            Yasawa Islands, Fiji

            Emissions Trading Scheme to include Pacific Island Countries.
            A solution? Every year Australia – the largest donor in the
            Pacific – commits A$1.5 billion in direct support to the
            Pacific, and recently announced it was increasing the size
            of its Australian Infrastructure Financing Facility for the
            Pacific to A$4 billion and would increase its focus on climate
            infrastructure financing.  But this is to do ‘more of the same’. It
            fails to address the fundamental challenges: a lack of capacity,
            a lack of quality developers, limited-to-no secondary market
            for operating assets, and near zero private sector investment.
            But these challenges are not new and successful international
            examples exist, eg. Climate Investor One. There are examples
            that deliver comprehensive end-to-end support to develop,
            build, own, operate and finance renewable energy projects
            across the Pacific; coordinate international advisory agencies
            to provide objective, independent advice to the governments
            and utilities of the Pacific; and leverage donor funding to
            ‘de-risk’ projects and attract private sector investment to the   Conference Travel, Pacific style (courtesy of RAAF)
            region.

            This more hands-on end-to-end model establishes a parallel   Lachlan studied electrical engineering and physics at
            pathway to dramatically accelerate the roll-out of renewables   Melbourne University, law at ANU and Cambridge
            across the Pacific and materially reduces the need for scarce   University, business at Harvard and applied finance
            donor funding.                                       at ANU.

            The challenges for the roll-out of renewables across the Pacific   After initially working in micro and automotive
            are manifold. But with careful consideration of stakeholder   electronics, he worked briefly as an IP & IT litigation
            needs, solutions do exist and represent an important   lawyer before moving into venture capital for ten years
            opportunity for donor agencies and private sector investors   investing in medical devices, materials technologies, and
            alike. Most importantly, however, they represent a potentially   wind energy ventures. He has also worked in research
            transformative opportunity for the people and nations of the   commercialisation and renewable energy policy in
            Yasawa Islands, Fiji                                 the ACT.
            Pacific to transition to a cleaner, greener, more sustainable
            energy future.
                                                                 After almost three decades, Lachlan and his family
                                                                 returned to Melbourne in 2021. More recently, he has
            Lachlan James (1989)
                                                                 been working to develop a fund for renewable energy
                                                                 projects in the Pacific and is also on the Commonwealth
                                                                 Government’s R&D Tax Incentives Committee.

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