 The draft SDG Goal 7 is the energy goal and there are three targets within that. Universal access to reliable, modern and affordable energy services by 2030, a double of the rate of improvement of efficiency and a substantial increase in the share of renewables in the global energy mix all by 2030. I think these three goals and the energy SDG number seven in general are a massive improvement on where we were in 2000, where energy was noticeably missing from the millennium development goals. Energy is a key enabler of development and I think one of the benefits of the SDGs across all the goals but particularly with the targets that have been set for the energy goal is that they're universal and apply to developed countries as well and there's much work to be done on the efficiency and the renewable side in developed countries that already have achieved the universal access goal. I think one of the things as well about energy is that in the last three years or so in 2012, Rio Plus 20, Bankimoon launched the UN's Sustainable Energy for All initiative which is a voluntary initiative but has been a really good catalyst in bringing together good brains and will to really push the energy agenda forward. Particularly looking at the goals themselves but definitions under that and the ways that things might be tracked as we begin to move forward towards implementation. I think one of the things that we've seen in the energy sector in general across the developed and the developing world is a really big focus on large scale infrastructure for electricity generation and with that a focus on the number of megawatts supplied for national grids. We know that to achieve the universal access goal there needs to be far more attention politically and financially towards decentralised solutions. That means off grid solutions, mini grids and standalone systems in rural areas. To do that we need to have a lot more attention on the sorts of finance mechanisms that we would need to really get very large scale finance into lots and lots and lots of small initiatives and the political will to do that. I think one of the things that we saw with the MDGs as well was in areas such as water, food, health. Civil society organisations were extremely key in taking those MDG goals as a starting point to hold governments to account. Civil society organisations within the energy sector thus far have been fairly weak at doing that and it's something that really needs to be improved, capacity needs to be built but also there needs to be political will to include those sorts of civil society organisations and the practitioners that have really strong experience on the ground in delivering very small scale solutions into the political decision making processes. With that need for many, many small scale initiatives I'd be exploring bottom up approaches to designing energy services that really meet people's needs given the context that you're going to have quite localised services that often are not in the case of electricity delivering high levels of power, how can what is being delivered maximise the benefits and impacts. We take a case study approach to looking at what's working and what's not working across different countries including action projects in Nigeria and Energy Lab in Tanzania. I think within the context of the SDGs one of the things that's really important is to be bringing together those civil society organisations to more strategically engage and IIG is a founding member of a new alliance called the Alliance of CSOs for Clean Energy Access the access group which is working at national level to build capacity for CSOs to engage within energy policy at a multi-stakeholder forum level. The learning that would come out of those sorts of forum policy making would then be brought up into an international discussion space. The other thing that we're working on is looking at that finance question and how to get that into lots and lots of small. There's a strong expectation within the SDGs that the private sector will be a key deliverer. So we're looking around that sort of question to see how that would really be operationalised and what's the role of public finance within a public-private mix to catalyse energy service development into poorer groups.