1 / 29

ASEAN Regional Cooperation for Sustainable Energy

ASEAN Regional Cooperation for Sustainable Energy. Eric Kemp-Benedict Asia Centre Director, Stockholm Environment Institute HDFF & The Asia Forum HDFF & Chairman’s Circle Queen’s Park Hotel, Bangkok 25 March 2014. The Story in Brief. Energy for Development.

lorant
Télécharger la présentation

ASEAN Regional Cooperation for Sustainable Energy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ASEAN Regional Cooperation for Sustainable Energy Eric Kemp-Benedict Asia Centre Director, Stockholm Environment Institute HDFF & The Asia Forum HDFF & Chairman’s Circle Queen’s Park Hotel, Bangkok 25 March 2014

  2. The Story in Brief

  3. Energy for Development • Providing a clean, affordable, reliable supply of energy to poor households for lighting, cooking and heating is a prerequisite to successfully fight poverty and improve human well-being • Challenge 1: Allocation of energy supplies • Basic energy access is difficult to sustain unless incomes rise • Income generation requires energy for productive uses • Challenge 2: The environment • Energy-related greenhouse gas emissions are about 75% of the global total • Hydropower and bioenergy could appropriate significant shares of available land and water resources • Energy production and use results in dangerous pollutant emissions Nilsson et al. 2012

  4. Energy in a Low-carbon Future • ASEAN has abundant renewable resources (hydropower, wind, geothermal, biomass) • But renewables have three problems • They are not uniform (like petroleum) • They are costly to transport • They are typically intermittent • All three can be addressed through a large electricity grid • Also, can transition from carbon-intensive to low-carbon by switching sources Result: Most low-carbon scenarios feature heavy use of electricity

  5. Large Electricity Grids • For a low-carbon green economy, scenario exercises suggest: must electrify transport, households, industrial production • To do this, must have a very large grid to balance out intermittency • The grid may be larger than ASEAN alone • Cannot be bilateral electricity exchanges, as currently practiced

  6. More Details

  7. Inaction on Climate http://www.climateactiontracker.org/

  8. Source: IPCC

  9. Approximate income (PPP$/yr ) at year of peaking Sources: World Development Indicators Databank (World Bank, April 2012); Incomes in 2005 PPP US$

  10. Development will be Different • If we address climate change globally: • Consumption in high-income countries, and tourism, could fall • Demand for mitigation and adaptation technologies should rise • Value of fossil fuels could go up or down (or both) • Value of renewable energy sources should rise • Electricity is likely to be given new uses, especially for transport • There will be economy-wide changes that require coordination • If we do not: • Impacts on agriculture, coastal zones, and islands will become increasingly severe • Intense rain events and extreme heat are likely to be more frequent • Costs of climate impacts will rise (along with demand for adaptation technology) • In either case, development will be different

  11. Electricity Generation

  12. Electricity Generation A low-carbon transition

  13. Electricity Generation Energy highway A low-carbon transition

  14. Electricity Generation But relying on an extended network is a challenge for SIDS A low-carbon transition

  15. Energy Return on Energy Invested EROI values Hammerschlag 2006; Goldemberg 2007; Murphy and Hall 2010 Civilizational minimum: Hall et al. 2009

  16. Energy Return on Energy Invested EROI values Hammerschlag 2006; Goldemberg 2007; Murphy and Hall 2010 Civilizational minimum: Hall et al. 2009

  17. Energy Return on Energy Invested EROI values Hammerschlag 2006; Goldemberg 2007; Murphy and Hall 2010 Civilizational minimum: Hall et al. 2009

  18. Energy Return on Energy Invested EROI values Hammerschlag 2006; Goldemberg 2007; Murphy and Hall 2010 Civilizational minimum: Hall et al. 2009

  19. Energy Return on Energy Invested EROI values Hammerschlag 2006; Goldemberg 2007; Murphy and Hall 2010 Civilizational minimum: Hall et al. 2009

  20. Energy Return on Energy Invested Fossil EROI declines over time Renewable EROI can increase EROI values Hammerschlag 2006; Goldemberg 2007; Murphy and Hall 2010 Civilizational minimum: Hall et al. 2009

  21. Slides from the Expert Group Meeting in Urumqi, China Asian Energy Highway

  22. Building Green • It is much more cost-effective in the long run to build a green infrastructure from the start than to postpone it until later (Ha-Duong et al. 2007, den Elzen et al. 2010) • However, green infrastructure can be more costly in the short run • The technologies are not sufficiently developed to benefit from learning-by-doing (the “cost curve”) • It is not the most cost-effective when combined with existing technologies (lock-in) • Classic problem of positive externalities • Private investment will require incentives • Suggests a role for public finance

  23. Infrastructure Impacts Positive Negative Dams: displacement; downstream ecosystem impacts (esp. fish); flooding Thermal: land, air, water pollution; visual impact; heat; habitat fragmentation Wind: visual impact, noise, interfere with birds Distribution: visual impact, land for right-of-way • Dams: predictable water supply; irrigation; fish (in reservoir); flood control • Thermal*: construction, operation, and feedstock jobs; roads; markets • Wind: independence and/or local revenue • Distribution**: roads, construction and maintenance jobs *Burning coal, oil, natural gas, and biomass for electricity ** Power lines and pipelines

  24. Distribution, Access, and Equity • If power lines and pipelines pass through populations who do not get the benefits, it can create resentment • If those populations also lack basic services then it is common to see distribution infrastructure tapped, often by local entrepreneurs who sell the stolen energy at inflated prices

  25. Summary • A low-carbon future most likely means an electrified future • But renewable electricity is heterogeneous and intermittent • A large connected electricity grid can potentially solve this problem • But to work, it must go beyond bilateral agreements

More Related