Forecasts indicate that the global energy requirements will grow by almost one third between 2013 and 2040. This figure alone elucidates the international significance of energy supply and climate protection. Like in Germany, the building sector is a key factor in this context. UN statistics show that buildings account for 40 percent of energy consumption worldwide. Buildings are responsible for roughly one third of all green house gas emissions. This indicates that the need for technologies aimed at improving efficiency in buildings is rising continuously around the world.
dena also operates on the international stage as an agency for the applied energy transition. With its systems expertise that spans all technologies, in-depth understanding of the interaction between the market and regulatory law, as well as excellent contacts on the ground in business and in politics, dena is setting new standards in an international framework. However, it still maintains the same strategy abroad: promote, fund and inform.
From energy-efficient buildings to the eco-city
dena approaches the energy transition as an international challenge, seeking to establish sustainable, viable structures and mechanisms in each individual country. It builds bilateral cooperation and works closely with the national stakeholders to communicate technology made in Germany, which it adapts specifically to suit the regional circumstances. In the building sector, dena helps a variety of countries to build markets for energy-efficient construction and to further the cause of sustainable urban development, characterised by the term of Eco-Cities.
Lighthouse projects in China and Ukraine
dena cooperates with the national governments to create methods and instruments to build sustained growth. Together with its partners in the region, dena establishes innovative building standards and quality assurance measures, as well as developing national funding strategies. In countries like China and Ukraine, dena initiates lighthouse projects that encourage others to follow suit. Ultimately it develops best-practice examples for high efficiency standards that can be introduced to the market in the medium term. In this way, new export markets are opened up for German industry to sell energy efficiency products and energy services.