Program Overview
MCC’s $474 million Indonesia Compact (2013-2018) included the $288 million Green Prosperity (GP) Project that aimed to increase economic productivity and reduce land-based greenhouse gas emissions. The project funded 23 community-based off-grid renewable energy grants totaling $85.3 million. Some were designed as community-owned renewable energy projects, while others were renewable energy components of natural resource management projects. These grants sought to substitute renewable energy for fossil fuels in remote and rural communities, opening opportunities for social and economic improvements through access to electricity.
Evaluator Description
MCC commissioned Social Impact to conduct an independent final performance evaluation of this Grant Portfolio. Full report results and learning: https://mcc.icpsr.umich.edu/evaluations/index.php/catalog/207.
Key Findings
Renewable Energy Infrastructure Functionality
- The portfolio fell short of the objective of reducing poverty through low-carbon economic growth due to challenges in maintaining renewable energy technology operations.
- Many technologies are no longer in use. Technology associated with 6 grants is completely non-operational and a further 13 grants are operating sub-optimally.
Domestic and Economic Use of Electricity
- Outcomes related to energy substitution (and related greenhouse gas emissions reductions), electricity access and use are largely mediated by the generation capacity of infrastructure.
- Provision of renewable energy has encouraged domestic economic activities, though the aggregate effects have been modest due to limited growth in businesses providing higher- value goods and services.
- Grantee interventions promoting productive use of renewable energy have largely not been effective.
Sustainability
- Only two grants have a good sustainability outlook, while almost half have a poor outlook.
- Common factors influencing sustainability include operations financing, maintenance and repairs, the operating environment with on-grid alternatives, and ownership transfer challenges.
Evaluation Questions
This final performance evaluation was designed to answer the following questions.- 1 To what extent are renewable energy assets functioning as intended four years post-compact?
- 2 How has energy access, consumption, and use for households and businesses changed in response to the provision of renewable energy? To what extent do these changes favor the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions?
- 2 What are the prospects for long-term sustainability for each grant?
Detailed Findings
These findings build upon the interim evaluation report results published in 2020.Renewable Energy Infrastructure Functionality

Functional Status of renewable energy infrastructure, by grant. Note: Relative size of boxes reflect the relative magnitudes of renewable energy disbursement. Names of smaller grants have been omitted.
Domestic and Economic Use of Electricity
According to compact monitoring reports, 9,095 renewable energy users were added by the 15 grants which targeted provision of renewable energy electricity for household use. Accounting for non-operational infrastructure and updated user numbers from functional technologies, the number of users with access to grant-funded renewable energy electricity at endline was less than 3,000. Technical issues have further influenced energy access by either making the technology inoperable, reducing hours of operation, or reducing the number of users with access to electricity. Where technology is functional, it is being used for lighting and/or powering appliances. Grants which provided renewable energy to substitute non-renewable energy sources or improve existing renewable energy sources were most likely to be contributing to reduced greenhouse gas emissions (48 percent of the portfolio, or 11 out of 23 grants), though this could not be substantiated by the evaluation.While renewable energy provision has encouraged economic activities, these mostly produce items for direct consumption by the local community, such as refrigerated goods or snacks, and are unlikely to significantly change the local economic conditions. In a few locations, new renewable energy-powered businesses such as furniture, carpentry, and motorcycle workshops were reported, though these were not common. The evaluation also found limited evidence that grant-promoted economic use of renewable energy through provision of production houses, equipment, and training, had been effective, with only 5 of 15 production houses operational and in use. Key constraints to pursuing grant-promoted activities included insufficient working capital to purchase raw inputs, producer preferences to sell unprocessed goods, and lack of market linkage to facilitate sale of processed products.
Sustainability

Portfolio-wide sustainability outlook
Financing renewable energy is a common constraint as technologies in the portfolio are largely reliant on funding from users; however, the ability to regulate user fees is subject to user willingness and ability to pay and tariff regulatory requirements. Ensuring sufficient demand and payment compliance are also challenges to financing. A few grants receive ongoing support from grantees or subsidization from government, but these support mechanisms are not guaranteed in the long-term. Therefore, when faced with a serious O&M hurdle, grant-funded technologies have often been abandoned. Local knowledge and accessibility of vendors to support maintenance and repairs were also key factors for sustainability, as well as the arrival of alternative sources of energy to substitute for grant-funded renewable energy. In some cases, transfer of ownership created additional sustainability challenges, particularly where there was lack of clarity on infrastructure ownership. This was cited as the main reason why needed repairs had not been completed, particularly for village government-owned infrastructure.
Economic Rate of Return
MCC considers a 10% economic rate of return (ERR) as the threshold to proceed with investment. The evaluator provided feedback on the validity of the ex-ante ERRs in light of the evaluation findings for the six endline case study grants. Five of the six case study grants had known estimated ex-ante ERRs ranging from 14.20 % to 34.90%. However, renewable energy operational issues combined with limited evidence on reduced energy expenditures and income gains suggest that benefits are likely to be lower than anticipated across the six case studies.More broadly, the sub-optimal functional status of technologies across the portfolio at endline calls into question whether many of the grants would cross the ten percent threshold. Moreover, in the absence of a portfolio-wide ERR estimation, there is limited quantitative evidence to justify MCC investment.
MCC Learning
- MCC should conduct comprehensive demand and value chain analyses prior to the investment decision.
- Joint ownership through a special purpose vehicle (SPV) between grantees, operators of the grid and the community does not guarantee sustainable outcomes.
- Quality control mechanisms, including post-compact ownership models, should be entrenched early in the compact design and implementation to ensure sustainable outcomes for MCC infrastructure investments.
- Evaluations of infrastructure investments, particularly small infrastructure, should inspect infrastructure prior to launching household or business data collection.
- Grant facility investments should clearly articulate what success looks like and ensure this definition of success is shared between MCC and country partners.
- MCC should carefully consider approaches to ensure the long-term operations and maintenance of newly introduced technologies.
Evaluation Methods

2022-002-2736