Quantexa führt KI-gestützten Workload für Microsoft Fabric ein, um die Datenqualität und -verwendbarkeit im gesamten Unternehmen zu verbessern

• Quantexa Unify Workload für Microsoft Fabric bietet Benutzern branchenführende Entitätsauflösungsfähigkeiten, um hochpräzise Datenabgleiche und Beziehungsrecherchen in großem Umfang durchzuführen.

 • Unternehmen können die Datenqualität verbessern, Datensilos beseitigen, Kosten senken und die Herausforderungen bewältigen, die mit der Vorbereitung von Daten für KI verbunden sind, und so eine bessere und schnellere Entscheidungsfindung ermöglichen.

LONDON und CHICAGO, Nov. 20, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Quantexa, ein weltweit führender Anbieter von Decision Intelligence (DI)–Lösungen für den öffentlichen und privaten Sektor, kündigte heute auf der Microsoft Ignite die sofortige Verfügbarkeit von Quantexa Unify Workload für Microsoft Fabric an. Quantexa Unify, das sich derzeit in der Preview–Phase befindet, bietet fortschrittliche, KI–gestützte Entitätsauflösung und Datenabgleich für Microsoft Fabric. Das ermöglicht es Unternehmen, die geschäftskritischen Funktionen der Decision Intelligence–Plattform von Quantexa zu nutzen, um eine einheitliche, vernetzte Sicht auf ihre Daten zu erhalten. Mehr als 50 branchenführende Unternehmen und Behörden haben diese Möglichkeit genutzt, um über 60 Milliarden Datensätze mit bemerkenswerter Geschwindigkeit und 99%iger Genauigkeit abzugleichen.

Ein Video zu dieser Ankündigung finden Sie unter https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/d7652daf–4337–4eec–b971–61cf4c867ef4

Dieser innovative Workload ermöglicht es Dateningenieuren, Datenwissenschaftlern, Analysten und Geschäftsanwendern, Daten aus verschiedenen Quellen mühelos zu verbinden und kontinuierlich zu aktualisieren, und zwar vollständig innerhalb von Microsoft Fabric. Mit dem Quantexa Unify–Workload können Unternehmen automatisch Datensätze derselben Entitäten – wie Personen, Unternehmen, Standorte und Kontakte – identifizieren, abgleichen und konsolidieren, trotz eventueller Inkonsistenzen oder Fehler.

Schaffung einer vertrauenswürdigen Datengrundlage für Analysen und generative KI
Quantexa Unify liest Daten direkt aus OneLake, automatisiert die Bereinigung, das Parsing und die Normalisierung von Datenquellen und führt dann einen ausgeklügelten Datenabgleich durch, um eine zusammenhängende Sicht auf die Daten in OneLake zu erzeugen. Quantexa Unify bietet vorkonfigurierte Abgleichsvorlagen, die es dem Benutzer ermöglichen, den Grad der erforderlichen Abgleichsqualität zu definieren. Microsoft Power BI–Berichte werden bereitgestellt, um Datenqualitätsmetriken und –probleme hervorzuheben. Der Workload läuft direkt innerhalb von Microsoft Fabric und schreibt die Ergebnisse zurück nach OneLake zur weiteren Verwendung.

Das Ergebnis ist ein unternehmensweiter Datenbestand, der kontinuierlich mit zuverlässigen Daten aktualisiert wird:

  • Kann nahtlos in die gesamte Palette der Daten–, Analyse– und Geschäftsproduktivitätsdienste von Microsoft integriert werden.
  • Maximiert die Möglichkeiten der Business Intelligence.
  • Bietet eine vernetzte, kontextbezogene Ansicht in Form eines Wissensgraphen, um erweiterte graphenbasierte Analysen zu ermöglichen.
  • Kann in privat erstellte und trainierte KI–Modelle eingespeist werden.
  • Kann als leistungsstarke Ressource in Verbindung mit Copilot Studio und Azure OpenAI verwendet werden, um die Entscheidungsfindung zu verbessern oder zu automatisieren und Innovationen voranzutreiben.

Die wichtigsten Funktionen von Quantexa Unify

  • Automatisiertes No–Code–Daten–Mapping: Der Workload kann mit Ihrem eigenen Datenmodell konfiguriert werden, was den Prozess des Mappings von Datenfeldern zwischen verschiedenen Systemen oder Datenquellen über eine visuelle Schnittstelle vereinfacht und beschleunigt.
  • Erweiterter Entitätsabgleich: Mithilfe von Standardkonfigurationen und maschinellem Lernen führt der Workload einen hochwertigen Abgleich zwischen Entitätstypen durch, verknüpft Datensätze und reichert unvollständige Daten an.
  • Kontextualisierte Einblicke: Bedeutende Zusammenhänge aufdecken, verborgene Beziehungen sichtbar machen und Wissensgraphen erstellen.
  • Datenqualität: Aufdecken und Beheben von Datenqualitätsproblemen mithilfe von Power BI Dashboards.
  • Skalierbarkeit und Leistung: Dieser Workload ist für Geschwindigkeit und Skalierbarkeit optimiert und eignet sich daher für große Unternehmensumgebungen, in denen das Datenvolumen und die Komplexität überwältigend sein können.
  • Demokratisierter Datenzugriff für eine schnellere und bessere Entscheidungsfindung: Beschleunigen Sie die Fähigkeit Ihres Unternehmens, vertrauenswürdige Daten für technische und geschäftliche Benutzer im gesamten Unternehmen zugänglich und nutzbar zu machen. Nutzen Sie die Ergebnisse von Quantexa Unify in Microsofts vollständiger Suite von Analysetools, einschließlich Microsoft Copilot.

Dan Higgins, Chief Product Officer von Quantexa, meint: „Die Ankündigung der Vorschau von Quantexa Unify für Microsoft Fabric auf der Ignite ist ein wichtiger Meilenstein in unserer laufenden Zusammenarbeit mit Microsoft. Unser KI–gestützter Workload für Microsoft Fabric wird die Art und Weise verändern, wie Unternehmen ihre Daten bereitstellen, um ihre Investitionen in generative KI zu maximieren. Diese leistungsstarke Integration hilft Unternehmen, die Grundlage für eine verbesserte Entscheidungsfindung zu schaffen, indem sie komplexe Beziehungen zwischen Unternehmen unter Verwendung externer und interner Datenquellen schnell und präzise auflöst. Indem wir die Skalierbarkeit und Flexibilität von Microsoft Fabric nutzen, versetzen wir Unternehmen in die Lage, Innovationen voranzutreiben und das volle Potenzial ihrer Daten wie nie zuvor auszuschöpfen.“

Amir Netz, Technical Fellow and CTO for Microsoft Fabric, erklärt: „Wir freuen uns, dass die Innovation von Quantexa eine so überzeugende Funktionalität für Microsoft Fabric bietet. So können Unternehmen ihre Daten in Microsoft Fabric nutzen, um bessere Entscheidungen zu treffen und die betriebliche Effizienz zu steigern. Da sich Kunden zunehmend auf Microsoft Fabric verlassen, um ihre digitale Transformation zu beschleunigen, können sie mit dieser Funktion tiefere Einblicke gewinnen, die sie von ihren Dateninvestitionen erwarten, und das alles innerhalb eines vertrauenswürdigen unternehmensweiten Datenbestands. Wir freuen uns darauf, weiterhin mit Quantexa zusammenzuarbeiten, um unseren Kunden dabei zu helfen, neue Möglichkeiten zu erschließen und das Vertrauen in ihre KI– und datengesteuerten Initiativen zu stärken.“

Novo Banco nimmt an privater Preview teil
Neben der öffentlichen Preview, die es Kunden ermöglicht, Quantexa Unify mit öffentlich zugänglichen Datensätzen zu testen, gab Quantexa auch bekannt, dass es eine private Preview für Kunden gestartet hat, die bereit sind, Quantexa Unify einzusetzen. Novo Banco, ein früher Teilnehmer der privaten Preview und ein bekanntes Finanzinstitut mit Hauptsitz in Portugal, das Privat– und Firmenkunden betreut und Ambitionen in Bezug auf die digitale Transformation hat, die auch die Ausweitung des Angebots der Bank auf ganz Europa einschließt, gab heute auf der Microsoft Ignite seine Absicht bekannt, mit Quantexa und Microsoft ein unternehmensweites Datenportfolio aufzubauen.

Seamus Murphy, Chief Operating Officer bei Novo Banco, sagt: „Das Verständnis des Kundenverhaltens durch eine umfassende Datensicht ermöglicht es den Banken, die Kommunikation und die Dienstleistungen zu personalisieren, eine engere Kundenbeziehung zu fördern und gleichzeitig den Kunden und die Bank mit einer einzigen Investition zu schützen.
Der derzeitige Trend, vertikale Lösungen zu entwickeln, ist nicht kosteneffizient und hat nicht die beabsichtigten Auswirkungen auf das Geschäft. Ein unternehmensweiter Datenbestand ist die Zukunft der effektiven Datenverwendung im Bankwesen. Unify für Microsoft Fabric von Quantexa wird für uns die Grundlage sein, um Organisations– und Datensilos aufzulösen und fortschrittliche Analysen, Effizienz durch KI und einen besseren Kundenservice zu ermöglichen.“

Um mehr darüber zu erfahren, wie Ihr Unternehmen an der öffentlichen oder privaten Preview von Quantexa Unify für Microsoft Fabric teilnehmen kann, klicken Sie bitte hier.

Über Quantexa
Quantexa ist ein globales Unternehmen für KI–, Daten– und Analysesoftware, das Pionierarbeit auf dem Gebiet der Decision Intelligence leistet, damit Unternehmen anhand von Daten im Kontext zuverlässige betriebliche Entscheidungen treffen können. Mit den neuesten Fortschritten in der Künstlichen Intelligenz (KI) hilft die Decision Intelligence–Plattform von Quantexa Unternehmen, versteckte Risiken und neue Chancen aufzudecken, indem sie isolierte Daten zusammenführt und in eine zuverlässige, wiederverwendbare Ressource verwandelt. Es löst die größten Herausforderungen in den Bereichen Datenmanagement, Customer Intelligence, KYC, Finanzkriminalität, Risiko, Betrug und Sicherheit während des gesamten Kundenlebenszyklus.

Die Quantexa Decision Intelligence–Plattform verbessert die operative Leistung mit einer über 90 % größeren Genauigkeit und einer 60–mal schnelleren Auflösung des Analysemodells als herkömmliche Ansätze. Eine von Forrester unabhängig in Auftrag gegebene TEI–Studie über die Decision Intelligence–Plattform von Quantexa ergab, dass die Kunden innerhalb von drei Jahren einen ROI von 228 % erzielten. Quantexa wurde 2016 gegründet und hat heute über 800 Mitarbeiter und Tausende von Plattformnutzern, die mit Milliarden von Transaktionen und Datenpunkten auf der ganzen Welt arbeiten.

Ressourcen
Blog von Microsoft Fabric Ignite: https://aka.ms/Fabric–Ignite24

Medienanfragen
Kontakt: Stephanie Crisp, Fight or Flight
E–Mail: Quantexa@fightorflight.com

ODER

Kontakt: Adam Jaffe, SVP of Corporate Marketing
Telefon: +1 609 502 6889
E–Mail: adamjaffe@quantexa.com


GLOBENEWSWIRE (Distribution ID 1001014194)

A Quantexa apresenta a carga de trabalho alimentada por IA para o Microsoft Fabric para transformar a qualidade e a usabilidade dos dados em toda a empresa

• O Quantexa Unify Workload for Microsoft Fabric oferece aos usuários recursos de resolução de entidades líderes do setor para realizar a correspondência de dados altamente precisa e a descoberta de relacionamentos em escala.

 • As organizações podem melhorar a qualidade dos dados, eliminar silos, reduzir custos e enfrentar os desafios relacionados à preparação dos dados para IA, facilitando a tomada de decisões melhores e mais rápidas.

LONDRES e CHICAGO, Nov. 20, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Quantexa, líder global em soluções de inteligência de decisão (DI) para os setores público e privado, anunciou hoje, no Microsoft Ignite, a disponibilidade imediata do Unify Workload da Quantexa para o Microsoft Fabric. O Quantexa Unify, atualmente em pré–visualização, traz a resolução avançada de entidades e a correspondência de dados com base em IA para o Microsoft Fabric. Isso permite que as organizações aproveitem os recursos de missão crítica da Plataforma de Inteligência de Decisão da Quantexa para criar um patrimônio de dados corporativos com uma visão unificada e interconectada de seus dados. Mais de 50 empresas líderes do setor e órgãos governamentais usaram esse recurso para combinar mais de 60 bilhões de registros com uma velocidade significativa e 99% de precisão.

Um vídeo que acompanha esse anúncio está disponível em https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/d7652daf–4337–4eec–b971–61cf4c867ef4

Essa carga de trabalho inovadora permite que engenheiros de dados, cientistas de dados, analistas e usuários corporativos se conectem sem esforço e atualizem continuamente os dados de várias fontes inteiramente no Microsoft Fabric. Com a carga de trabalho do Quantexa Unify, as organizações podem identificar, combinar e consolidar automaticamente os registros das mesmas entidades – como pessoas, empresas, locais e contatos – apesar de quaisquer inconsistências ou erros.

Criação de uma base de dados confiável para análise e IA generativa
O Quantexa Unify lê dados diretamente do OneLake, automatiza a limpeza, análise e normalização de fontes de dados e, em seguida, realiza uma correspondência de dados sofisticada para produzir uma visualização conectada dos dados no OneLake. O Quantexa Unify fornece modelos de correspondência pré–configurados, permitindo que os usuários definam o nível de qualidade de correspondência necessário. Os relatórios do Microsoft Power BI são fornecidos para destacar métricas e problemas de qualidade de dados. A carga de trabalho é executada diretamente no Microsoft Fabric e grava os resultados de volta no OneLake para uso mais amplo.

O resultado é um patrimônio de dados em toda a empresa que é continuamente atualizado com dados confiáveis:

  • Pode ser perfeitamente integrado ao conjunto completo de serviços de dados, análise e produtividade de negócios da Microsoft.
  • Maximiza os recursos de business intelligence.
  • Fornece uma visão conectada e contextual como um gráfico de conhecimento para desbloquear análises avançadas baseadas em gráficos.
  • Pode ser alimentado em modelos de IA criados e treinados de forma privada.
  • Pode ser usado como um ativo poderoso em conjunto com o Copilot Studio e o Azure OpenAI para ampliar ou automatizar a tomada de decisões e estimular a inovação.

Principais recursos do Quantexa Unify

  • Mapeamento de dados automatizado e sem código: A carga de trabalho pode ser configurada com seu próprio modelo de dados, o que simplifica e acelera o processo de mapeamento de campos de dados entre diferentes sistemas ou fontes de dados utilizando uma interface visual.
  • Correspondência avançada de entidades: Usando configurações prontas para uso e aprendizado de máquina, a carga de trabalho realiza correspondências de alta qualidade entre tipos de entidades, vinculando registros e enriquecendo dados incompletos.
  • Insights contextualizados: Descubra conexões significativas, revele relações ocultas e produza gráficos de conhecimento.
  • Qualidade dos dados: Descubra e corrija problemas de qualidade de dados utilizando os painéis do Power BI.
  • Escalabilidade e desempenho: Essa carga de trabalho é otimizada para velocidade e escalabilidade, o que a torna adequada para ambientes corporativos de grande escala, nos quais o volume e a complexidade dos dados podem ser esmagadores.
  • Acesso democratizado aos dados para uma tomada de decisão mais rápida e melhor: Acelere a capacidade da sua empresa de tornar os dados confiáveis acessíveis e utilizáveis por usuários técnicos e comerciais em toda a organização. Aproveite os resultados do Quantexa Unify no conjunto completo de ferramentas analíticas da Microsoft, incluindo o Microsoft Copilot.

Dan Higgins, diretor de produtos da Quantexa, disse: “O anúncio da prévia do Quantexa Unify para Microsoft Fabric no Ignite é um marco significativo em nossa colaboração contínua com a Microsoft. Nossa carga de trabalho com tecnologia de IA para o Microsoft Fabric transformará a forma como as organizações obtêm prontidão de dados para maximizar seus investimentos em IA generativa. Essa poderosa integração ajuda as organizações a criarem a base para uma tomada de decisão aprimorada, resolvendo relacionamentos complexos entre entidades utilizando fontes de dados externas e internas com velocidade e precisão. Ao aproveitar a escalabilidade e a flexibilidade do Microsoft Fabric, estamos capacitando as empresas a impulsionar a inovação e a aproveitar todo o potencial de seus dados de uma maneira nunca vista”.

Almir Netz, Technical Fellow e CTO da Microsoft Fabric, disse: “Estamos satisfeitos em ver a inovação da Quantexa trazer um recurso tão atraente para o Microsoft Fabric. Isso permite que as organizações usem seus dados no Microsoft Fabric para promover uma melhor tomada de decisões e uma maior eficiência operacional. Como os clientes confiam cada vez mais no Microsoft Fabric para acelerar sua transformação digital, esse recurso permitirá que eles obtenham insights mais profundos que esperam de seus investimentos em dados, tudo dentro de um patrimônio de dados confiável em toda a empresa. Esperamos continuar a colaborar com a Quantexa para ajudar nossos clientes a desbloquear novas oportunidades e aumentar a confiança em suas iniciativas de IA e orientadas por dados”.

Novo Banco se une ao Private Preview
Além da pré–visualização pública, que permite que os clientes experimentem o Quantexa Unify com conjuntos de dados disponíveis publicamente, a Quantexa também divulgou que abriu uma pré–visualização privada para clientes prontos para implementar o Quantexa Unify. Hoje, no Microsoft Ignite, o Novo Banco, um dos primeiros participantes da pré–visualização privada e uma instituição financeira proeminente com sede em Portugal, atendendo a clientes individuais e corporativos, com ambições de transformação digital que incluem a ampliação das ofertas do banco em toda a Europa, divulgou sua intenção de construir um patrimônio de dados em toda a empresa com a Quantexa e a Microsoft.

Seamus Murphy, diretor de operações do Novo Banco, declarou: “Compreender o comportamento do cliente por meio de uma visão abrangente dos dados permite que os bancos personalizem as comunicações e os serviços, promovendo relacionamentos mais sólidos com os clientes e, ao mesmo tempo, protegendo–os e ao banco com um único investimento.
A tendência atual de criar soluções verticais não é econômica e não gera o impacto comercial desejado. Um patrimônio de dados em toda a empresa é o futuro da operacionalização eficaz de dados no setor bancário. O Unify for Microsoft Fabric da Quantexa será a base para desmantelarmos os silos organizacionais e de dados, permitindo análises avançadas, eficiência usando IA e melhor atendimento ao cliente”.

Para saber mais sobre como sua organização pode participar da visualização pública ou privada do Quantexa Unify para Microsoft Fabric, visite aqui.

Sobre a Quantexa
A Quantexa é uma empresa global de software de IA, dados e análise, pioneira em Decision Intelligence, que capacita organizações a tomar decisões operacionais confiáveis com dados contextualizados. Utilizando os mais recentes avanços em IA, a Plataforma de Inteligência de Decisão da Quantexa ajuda as organizações a descobrirem riscos ocultos e novas oportunidades, unificando dados em silos e transformando–os no recurso mais confiável e reutilizável. Ela resolve os principais desafios de gerenciamento de dados, inteligência de clientes, KYC, crimes financeiros, riscos, fraudes e segurança, durante todo o ciclo de vida do cliente.

A Plataforma de Decision Intelligence da Quantexa melhora o desempenho operacional, proporcionando um aumento de mais de 90% na precisão e uma resolução do modelo analítico 60 vezes mais rápida do que as abordagens tradicionais. Um estudo de TEI da Forrester, encomendado de forma independente, sobre a Plataforma de Inteligência Decisória da Quantexa, constatou que os clientes obtiveram um ROI de 228% em três anos. Fundada em 2016, a Quantexa agora conta com mais de 800 funcionários e tem milhares de usuários da plataforma que trabalham com bilhões de transações e pontos de dados em todo o mundo.

Fontes
Blog Microsoft Fabric Ignite: https://aka.ms/Fabric–Ignite24

Consultas da mídia
C: Stephanie Crisp, Fight or Flight
E: Quantexa@fightorflight.com

OU

C: Adam Jaffe, Vice–Presidente Sênior de Marketing Corporativo
T: +1 609 502 6889
E: adamjaffe@quantexa.com


GLOBENEWSWIRE (Distribution ID 1001014194)

Born Innocent, Raised Violent: The Fate of a Billion Children

Over 1 billion children have had their lives disrupted by disasters since 2000, with over 80,000 schools damaged or destroyed. Credit: Shutterstock

Over 1 billion children have had their lives disrupted by disasters since 2000, with over 80,000 schools damaged or destroyed. Credit: Shutterstock

By Baher Kamal
MADRID, Nov 20 2024 – Did you know that hundreds of millions of children around the world are currently suffering from physical, sexual, and psychological violence, including child labour, child marriage, female genital mutilation, gender-based violence, war, trafficking, bullying, and cyberbullying?

This is the grim reality of up to a billion children vulnerable to various forms of abuse, as depicted by the United Nations  Special Representative of the Secretary-General on Violence against Children.

Commenting on a special report on this issue, the UN Special Representative, Najat Maalla M’Jid, revealed that violence against children has reached “unprecedented levels.”

Meanwhile, the UN specialised bodies, led by UN Children Fund (UNICEF), and the World Health Organization (WHO), among others, have revealed staggering findings on the occasion of the 2024 International Day for Disaster Risk Reduction.

No safe place for children

These findings revealed by the United Nations highlight that “there is no safe place for children” anywhere in the world.

Indeed, climate carnage, wars, human trafficking, slavery, and cyberviolence, among many other forms of abuse against the innocent children, stand behind their grim life.

See some of the most relevant facts:

  • UNICEF and other UN bodies report that half of the world’s children are at “extremely high risk” due to climate impacts and related disasters,
  • Over 1 billion children have had their lives disrupted by disasters since 2000, with over 80,000 schools damaged or destroyed,

Punished and Abused

Should all these facts be not frightening enough, please also know that 400 million children under five regularly endure psychological aggression and physical punishment at home;

And that 300 million children have been affected by online sexual exploitation and abuse over the past 12 months.

Young Girls: the Most Vulnerable

“Today’s generation of girls is disproportionately affected by global crises of climate, conflict, poverty and pushback on hard won gains for human rights and gender equality,” reports the United Nations on the occasion of the 2024 International Day of the Girl Child.

Did you know that:

  • Nearly 1 in 5 girls are still not completing lower-secondary and nearly 4 in 10 girls are not completing upper-secondary school today.
  • Globally, girls aged 5-14 spend 160 million more hours every day on unpaid care and domestic work than boys of the same age.
  • Adolescent girls continue to account for 3 in 4 new HIV infections among adolescents.
  • Nearly 1 in 4 married/partnered adolescent girls aged 15-19 have experienced physical or sexual violence from an intimate partner at least once in their lifetime.
  • Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, 100 million girls were at risk of child marriage in the next decade.

Rape: A Weapon of War

Add to all the above that more than 370 million girls and women alive today – or 1 in 8 – experienced rape or sexual assault before the age of 18, warns UNICEF.

And that “children in fragile settings are especially vulnerable to sexual violence,” said Russell.

“We are witnessing horrific sexual violence in conflict zones, where rape and gender-based violence are often used as weapons of war.”

The Digital Threat

Among emerging challenges are the risks faced by children in the digital spaces, including the tactics used by armed groups to recruit and exploit children.

According to UN data, most childhood sexual violence occurs during adolescence, with a significant spike between ages 14 and 17.

“Studies show that children who experience sexual violence are more likely to suffer repeated abuse.”

Survivors often carry the trauma of sexual violence into adulthood, facing higher risks of sexually transmitted diseases, substance abuse, social isolation, and mental health issues like anxiety and depression, as well as challenges in forming healthy relationships.

Although more girls and women are affected, and their experiences are better documented, boys and men are also impacted, with an estimated 240 to 310 million boys and men.

Today’s children have been raised in a violent world, thus, they will most likely fall in the hellish trap of exercising violence in their adulthood.

These hundreds and hundreds of millions of children will be the backbone of the immediate future. Do you think that their tragic fate is on the agenda of political –and business- leaders?

Solar and Wind Power Wealth Does Not Reach Consumers in Chile

At the San Felipe School, in Coyhaique, Chile, the solar panels of a 30 kW plant will be installed which will be inaugurated in the first week of December

At the San Felipe School, in Coyhaique, Chile, the solar panels of a 30 kW plant will be installed which will be inaugurated in the first week of December

By Orlando Milesi
SANTIAGO, Nov 20 2024 – Chile, a country rich in solar and wind energy and with huge photovoltaic power stations  and wind turbines in its elongated territory, managed to change its grid by incorporating renewable energies, which account for an installed capacity equivalent to 43.8 % of its electricity production.

However, it is woefully lacking in distributed generation projects, also known as decentralised generation, which are small scale, mostly dedicated to self-consumption and involving organised communities. This is so even though these initiatives would introduce the population to the advantages of clean energy.

Distributed generation would allow such a shift, but is currently in its infancy in this South American country of 19.8 million people. It lacks adequate legal impetus, access to financing and suffers from a cultural deficit among a population that knows little about it.“We are used to a centralised system and although there has been fossil energy replacement by renewable energy, it is still a large-scale, centralised model with negative impacts”: Cristian Mires.

Successful projects belong to mega-companies that have installed parks and wind turbines in the northern Atacama Desert and in southern Patagonia, between the Andes and the Pacific Ocean, selling their generation to the National Electricity System (SEN).

This profitable business does not benefit Chilean consumers who are suffering a huge tariff increase that will reach up to 60% in 2025. It is a gradual increase that began to be charged in July and will culminate next January after five years of tariff freezes due to the covid pandemic.

Thus, the impact of distributed generation with its panels on the roofs of homes, schools and community or municipal buildings is small.

The leftist government of Gabriel Boric sought to promote this citizen energy and reach the goal of 500 megawatts (MW) of installed capacity by the end of his term, in March 2026.

However, 17 months away from reaching that goal, distributed generation is minimal and only 0.1% corresponds to joint generation, as distributed generation is also known, according to the state-run National Energy Commission.

The Ministry of Energy told IPS that as of November 2024, the total installed capacity of distributed generation projects for self-consumption reached only 290 MW.

“Statistics show an upward trend in this type of project. Several initiatives promoted by the Ministry of Energy seek to encourage the development of this segment, such as the Public Solar Roofs 2.0 programme, which is being implemented and aims to install photovoltaic projects in public institutions,” said the institution that directs the country’s energy policy.

In 2015-2019, this programme installed photovoltaic systems on 136 buildings in 13 regions of Chile for a total of 5.3 megawatt peak (MWp). A technical office was then created to support public institutions in their feasibility analyses of solar energy plans.

Chile has decided, as part of its international climate commitments to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions, that its non-conventional renewable energies will contribute 80% of electricity generation by 2030 and 100% by 2050, when it will reach net zero emissions.

Solar panels installed in the roof of the Industrial Secondary School of Valdivia, a city 850 kilometers south of Santiago. Credit: Courtesy of Sofía Alarcón

Solar panels installed in the roof of the Industrial Secondary School of Valdivia, a city 850 kilometers south of Santiago. Credit: Courtesy of Sofía Alarcón

Barriers in Chile

Cristián Mires, lawyer and president of the NGO Energía Colectiva, says there are a number of barriers to developing jointly owned distributive energy.

“These projects are not cheap. Technical, legal and financial advice is required. A share is equivalent to at least US$530 per user. And if we want bigger savings, we are talking about up to US$2,100. And the majority of the population can’t afford that cost,” he told IPS.

There is no public or private funding for decentralised generation facilities, he claims.

This slows down the implementation of the 2014 Law on Distributed Generation for Self-consumption, which allows households, schools and businesses to self-supply their electricity use through their own generation and inject the surplus into the SEN. In practice, such generation has very restrictive rules for joint ownership.

“It needs to be modified, and as the Citizens‘ Energy Action Group we are participating in technical roundtables with the government and parliament to that end,” Mires said.

“We are used to a centralised system and although there has been fossil energy replacement by renewable energy, it is still a large-scale, centralised model with negative impacts,” he added.

In August, Energía Colectiva, based in Chile and present in other Latin American countries, launched the document Citizen energy in Chile, proposals for its promotion and implementation, where it claims there is potential to reach eight gigawatts (GW) of such citizen generation by 2040.

According to the document, Chile needs “a transition that conceives energy as a right, democratising its production and distribution. A transition focused on satisfying human needs, but which nevertheless understands the pressing need to reduce energy use. Such a transition can only be driven by citizens”.

Arrayán Wind Park, one of the 10 largest in Chile, located in the northern municipality of Ovalle. Credit: Ministry of Energy

Arrayán Wind Park, one of the 10 largest in Chile, located in the northern municipality of Ovalle. Credit: Ministry of Energy

Energy Communities, a key

So-called Energy Communities seek to encourage the participation of new groups in the production, management, use and marketing of energy.

They aim for a decentralised, local energy model with less environmental impact.

These communities seek to organise citizens to generate and manage their own energy, whether for social, economic and/or environmental purposes.

“These communities are considered a fundamental tool for carrying out just energy transitions, where people play a central role in the transformation towards more equitable systems of energy generation and use”, according to the specialised magazine Energía y Equidad.

Based on the use of renewable energy, the Communities offer access to affordable, clean and secure energy; enabling an active participation in response to the climate and ecological crisis by reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

In short, these Communities aim to promote local energy autonomy, strengthen social cohesion, reduce greenhouse gas emissions and decontaminate the local environment.

The 2014 law and its regulation five years later set standards for joint generation and joint ownership.

The Nueva Zelanda school in the municipality of Independencia, in the northern part of the capital, and Coopeumo, a farmers’ cooperative in the O Higgins region, bordering the Santiago metropolitan region, are community projects developed by municipalities and with citizen participation.

Both are connected to a grid into which they inject the energy generated and then receive discounts on their electricity bills.

Jorge Nauto, principal of the Industrial Secondary School of Valdivia, a city 850 kilometres south of Santiago, praised the experience of installing photovoltaic panels on the roof of his school.

“It is a 70 kilowatt peak (kWp) system determined according to the available surface area and the building’s annual consumption. It allows generating power for the premises and the injection of surpluses into the conventional electricity grid through the use of the Distributed Generation Act,” he told IPS from his location.

“Thanks to this generation, we achieved a significant reduction in electricity bills,” Nauto said, before emphasising the value, also educational, of using clean, renewable energy.

New business model

Antu Energía is a company based in Coyhaique, in the southern region of Aysén, which implements a new business model with photovoltaic energy.

It allows remote discounts, which means that a person can own or participate in a photovoltaic plant that injects energy in one place and discount that value in another place from the same distribution company.

We are calling for small companies or individuals to participate in Virtual Solar Panels by acquiring a minimum unit equivalent to generating 500 watts,” Manuel Matta, founding partner of Antu Energía, told IPS from Coyhaique.

The model lowers the investment to US$737 per kilowatt (kW) installed and compares favourably with a similar individually driven project that costs US$2,632 per kW.

This electrical engineer has already sold 28 of 60 minimum units of participation in the 30 kW plant installed on the roofs of the San Felipe high school in Coyhaique’s Plaza de Armas.

Daniela Zamorano, project coordinator for Energía Colectiva, told IPS from Joao Pessoa, in the northern Brazilian state of Paraíba, where she lives, that Chile lacks the political will to promote jointly-owned distributed generation.

“We are seeing problems today with rising rates, and the solutions proposed by the government always come from the logic of subsidising consumption. This is a snowball that reaches gigantic public spending amounts. But they do not visualise options for a long-term solution such as distributed generation,” she said.

Dazzling Wildlife Portraits at COP29: A Conversation with Photographer Brad Wilson

Brad Wilson is an American photographer specializing in classical portraits of animals. Credit: Umar Manzoor Shah/IPS

Brad Wilson is an American photographer specializing in classical portraits of animals. Credit: Umar Manzoor Shah/IPS

By Umar Manzoor Shah
BAKU, Nov 20 2024 (IPS)

As delegates at COP29 stroll through the venue in Baku, Azerbaijan, many pause to marvel at the stunning portraits of animals and birds adorning the pavilion walls. These 16 captivating images, showcasing Azerbaijan’s rich biodiversity, are more than just art—they’re a call to action.

Visitors, from diplomats to environmental activists, can often be seen snapping selfies with these majestic portraits, drawn to their lifelike intensity. Behind this collection is Brad Wilson, an American photographer whose mission is to “bridge the gap between humans and the natural world.” 

Wilson spoke to the IPS on his artistic journey and the philosophy underpinning his work.

“My name is Brad Wilson,” he begins. “I’m an American photographer specializing in classical portraits of animals.”

Classical portraits—usually a domain of human subjects—take on a unique depth when applied to animals.

“I aim to elevate animals to a higher level, presenting them as equals to humans—different but equal. Looking into their eyes through these photographs should invoke a sense of responsibility for their lives because we all share the same planet.”

For Wilson, animals represent a poignant connection to the natural world. “They are our closest relatives living in the wild,” he says. “They serve as a bridge, reminding us of our roots in nature.”

Brad Wilson photographic portraits were commissioned for the Haydar Aliyev Centre in Baku and are on display at the COP29 venue. Credit: Umar Manzoor Shah/IPS

Brad Wilson photographic portraits were commissioned for the Haydar Aliyev Centre in Baku and are on display at the COP29 venue. Credit: Umar Manzoor Shah/IPS

Process: A Dance of Patience and Precision

Creating these portraits is no simple task. Wilson describes the meticulous setup required for his work.

“All the portraits are done in a studio. I set up the studio close to where the animals live—often in sanctuaries or ranches. Then we bring them in for two or three hours,” he says. But those hours yield just fleeting moments of magic.

“I’m lucky if I get two or three good seconds with each animal. But that’s all I need—a single moment of connection that resonates.”

“My photo shoots are like meditations amidst organized chaos,” he says. Amid bustling activity, Wilson remains quiet and still, waiting for the animal to relax. “What I aim to capture is something uncommon—a glimpse of the animal’s soul, if you will. That’s what I hope viewers experience—a moment of connection.”

“I want people to understand that we are part of this planet’s biodiversity. We’re not separate from these creatures. It’s only been about 12,000 years—since the advent of farming and permanent settlements—that we began seeing ourselves as separate from the natural world. That’s a mistake. These animals remind us of our place in the web of life.”

“When we talk about climate action, it’s not just about saving the earth—it’s about saving humanity and the animals that share this planet with us. The earth will endure, but we might not.”

Behind the Scenes at COP29

Wilson’s collection at COP29 was commissioned by the Haydar Aliyev Centre in Baku.

“They brought me here in August to photograph animals in Baku and Shamaki,” he says. The project celebrates Azerbaijan’s biodiversity, showcasing species native to the region while promoting conservation awareness.

The portraits have been a hit among COP29 attendees, sparking conversations about the intersection of art, biodiversity, and climate action. Wilson hopes the images inspire policymakers and the public alike to take meaningful action.

“Climate change is already a massive problem, and it’s only going to worsen. We need to get serious about tackling it.”

Advice for Aspiring Photographers

For those inspired to follow in Wilson’s footsteps, he offers this advice: “Start with humans. I spent 15 years photographing people in New York City before transitioning to animals. That experience taught me about connection and emotion—skills that translate well to wildlife photography.”

IPS UN Bureau Report

 


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Embedding Education into Climate Finance Will Deliver Desired Learning, Climate Action Outcomes

Adenike Oladosu, ECW’s Climate Champion from Nigeria, during an interview with IPS at COP29. Credit: Joyce Chimbi/IPS

Adenike Oladosu, ECW’s Climate Champion from Nigeria, during an interview with IPS at COP29. Credit: Joyce Chimbi/IPS

By Joyce Chimbi
BAKU, Nov 20 2024 – Education is under threat as multiple crises push children out of school and into harms way. COP29 Baku could break historical barriers that hold back education from playing a unique, critical role to accelerate the ambition of nationally determined contributions (NDCs) to the Paris Agreement, protecting people and planet from life-threatening risks of climate change.

“Together with our partners, we have launched a pilot program in Somalia and Afghanistan, working with communities to identify early action activities or anticipatory action to act against the impacts of climate and minimize its disruption on children’s lives and education in those countries,” says Dianah Nelson, Chief of Education, Education Cannot Wait (ECW), the global fund for education in emergencies and protracted crises within the United Nations. 

Towards embedding education into the climate finance debate, ECW held a series of COP29 side events on such issues as unlocking the potential of anticipatory action through multi-stakeholder collaboration; meeting the challenge of conflict, climate and education; climate change-resilient education systems in the most vulnerable nations; and protecting children’s futures: why loss and damage must prioritise education in emergencies.

Panel discussions brought together a wide range of public and private partners, policymakers, and data experts to highlight the benefits of acting ahead of predicted climate shocks to protect education. “The climate crisis is an education crisis, and education cannot wait. We, therefore, need to center climate action on education and build climate-smart school technology. And most importantly, we need anticipatory action to reduce or eradicate the impact of climate shocks on children. Everyone has a contribution to make, and every child has a dream. Uninterrupted access to education makes their dream a reality. We need to safeguard or protect our schools from being vulnerable, or being attacked in conflict, or even being washed away by flood,” Adenike Oladosu, ECW’s Climate Champion and Nigerian climate justice advocate, told IPS.

A member of the audience during one of the sessions hosted by ECW. The sessions highlighted the need to ensure there is funding for education for those on the frontlines of the climate crisis, armed conflict and other emergencies. Credit: ECW

A member of the audience during one of the sessions hosted by ECW. The sessions highlighted the need to ensure there is funding for education for those on the frontlines of the climate crisis, armed conflict and other emergencies. Credit: ECW

These climatic impacts are already being felt in Pakistan. Zulekha, advisor/program manager of the Gender and Child Cell NDMA Pakistan, spoke about how the country has suffered “severe impacts from extreme weather. More than 24,000 schools were damaged in the 2022 floods, and nearly 3.5 million children were displaced and their educations put at risk. We were still reeling from the effects of the floods in 2023 when we started to launch the refresher of the Pakistan School Safety Framework.”

Oladosu spoke about the multiple, complex challenges confronting Nigeria and that anticipatory action “means bringing in the tools, through climate financing, to reduce the loss and damage. Anticipatory action addresses complex humanitarian crises in a proactive rather than reactive way to reduce the impact of a shock before its most severe effects are felt.”

She stressed that anticipatory actions are critical to avoid “losses that are simply irreplaceable, such as the number of days children spend out of school due to climate events, those left behind the education system, or even those who fall out of the system and into child marriages and militia groups.”

Education must reach every child impacted by a climate crisis they did not make. Credit: UNICEF

Education must reach every child impacted by a climate crisis they did not make. Credit: UNICEF

Lisa Doughten, Director, Financing and Partnership Division at OCHA, stated that in humanitarian crises, climate change “is significantly disrupting the overall access to education as schools temporarily shut down due to extreme climate events causing significant learning disruptions for millions of students. We have countries in conflict and fragile settings, and the climate crisis creates extremely difficult circumstances for, especially children and women.”

Doughten spoke about the need to leverage data to get ahead of predictable climate disasters and how OCHA works with various partners, including meteorological organizations, to monitor and use climate data. Using models that entail pre-planned programs, pre-determined triggers for weather events such as floods and storms, and pre-financing to ensure that funds are disbursed with speed towards anticipatory actions.

At COP29, ECW reiterated the power of education to unite communities, build consensus, and transform entire societies. In the classroom of the future, children will acquire the green skills they need to thrive in the new economy of the 21st century, and communities will come together to share early warnings and act in advance of climate hazards such as droughts and floods.

Graham Lang Deputy Director at ECW at one of the sessions hosted by the Global Fund aimed at ensuring those on the frontlines of the climate crisis, armed conflict and other emergencies are central to climate education action, decisions and commitments. Credit: ECW

Graham Lang, Deputy Director at ECW, at one of the sessions hosted by the Global Fund aimed at ensuring those on the frontlines of the climate crisis, armed conflict and other emergencies are central to climate education action, decisions and commitments. Credit: ECW

Stressing that in this classroom of the future, “an entire generation of future leaders can build the will and commitment to break down the status quo and create true lasting solutions to this unprecedented and truly terrifying crisis. Unfortunately, multilateral climate finance has not prioritized the education sector to date, meaning a tiny proportion, at most 0.03 percent, of all climate finance is spent on education. While children have the most to offer in building long-term solutions to the crisis, they also have the most to lose.”

ECW says the connection between climate action and education is also noticeably underrepresented in NDCs, or national commitments to adapt to and mitigate the impacts of climate change. Only half of all NDCs are child and youth sensitive, and this is an urgent situation for, in 2022 alone, over 400 million children experienced school closures as the result of extreme weather.

According to the Global Fund, “on the frontlines of the world’s worst humanitarian crises, these disruptions will often push children out of the education system forever. In places like Chad, Nigeria, and Sudan, where millions of children are already out of school, it could impact the future of an entire generation. ECW’s disaster-resilient classrooms, for instance, boosted enrolment rates in Chad.”

Amid Chad’s multidimensional challenges compounded by climate change, climate-resilient classrooms whose construction was funded by ECW and completed in March 2022 meant that classrooms were more durable and accessible for children and adolescents with disabilities. These classrooms withstood the heaviest rainy season in 30 years, triggering widespread flooding. Committing needed finances and acting with speed and urgency means bringing solutions within reach.

Accordingly, ECW says a key step is increasing access to the main climate funds—including the Global Environment Facility and Green Climate Fund—and activating new innovative financing modalities to deliver with speed, depth, and impact, and that the funding needs to be faster, transparent, and fully coordinated across both humanitarian and development sectors.

Looking forward to COP30 in Brazil, ECW stressed that education must play an integral role in the new Loss and Damage Fund. Education losses caused by climate change take unprecedented tolls on societies, especially in countries impacted by conflicts, displacement, and other pressing humanitarian emergencies.

Further emphasizing that the “loss and damage connected with years of lost learning may seem hard to quantify. But we know that for every USD 1 invested in a girl’s education, we see USD 2.80 in return. And we know that education isn’t just a privilege; it’s a human right. Finally, we need to ensure the New Collective Quantified Goal on climate finance includes a firm commitment to educating all the world’s children. Not just the easy-to-reach, but the ones that are the most vulnerable, the millions whose lives are being ripped apart by a crisis not of their own making.”

IPS UN Bureau Report

 


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