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  • Oil & Gas
26 July 2019

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  • Vietnam
​ENI is the operator of the block with 50 per cent participating interest in the project.
New Delhi: Essar Exploration and Production (EEPL) and Italian multinational oil and gas company ENItoday announced they have found natural gas and condensates in the Ken Bau prospect, offshore Vietnam.
ENI is the operator of the block with 50 per cent participating interest in the project.

“Exploration well located at Block 114, Song Hong Basin, offshore Vietnam, has proven the presence of gas and condensate in the Ken Bau prospect. The well result indicates a significant potential of the hydrocarbon accumulation. Eni Vietnam is the Operator of Block 114 with a 50% share; EEPL holds the remaining 50%,” ENI said in a statement.

It added the exploration well Ken Bau1X has been drilled at a depth of 95 meter below water level and reaches a total depth of 3,606 meter.

“Ken Bau 1X results represent a significant breakthrough for evaluating the exploration potential in the Song Hong Basin,” the company said.

Essar said it has invested $1.1 billion in the upstream sector and currently has investments in three upstream oil and gas ventures, including block OPL 226 in Nigeria, Joint Venture with ENI in Vietnam and acreages in India.

  • Oil & Gas
26 July 2019

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  • Indonesia

The United Arab Emirates’ (UAE’s) state-owned energy company Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC) will team up with state-owned oil and gas company Pertamina to build liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) storage in Indonesia as part of the economic cooperation agreement signed during the visit of the UAE’s prince Syekh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan to Indonesia on Wednesday.

Indonesia’s Ambassador to the UAE Husin Bagis said Friday that the storage would be built to receive the LPG that would be imported from the Middle Eastern country.

“The LPG storage will be used to store the LPG imported from the UEA. Hence, when Indonesia needs LPG, the country shouldn’t wait for imports for too long,” he said.

Indonesia spends US$3 billion a year on LPG imports to meet 70 percent of its national LPG demand.

However, Husin noted that last year Indonesia suffered a trade deficit of $500 million in its trade with the UAE. Indonesia’s exports to the UAE totaled $1.5 billion last year, while its imports stood at $2 billion.

“Pertamina will need to prepare the location first, while ADNOC is fully ready for this project. They have a lot of money, we should utilize it,” he said, adding UAE investors love brown-field projects.

The ambassador further said the government should work on the issues that have been hampering investment, such as those related to land acquisition.

Besides ADNOC in the downstream sector, the UAE will also invest in the upstream sector through state-owned energy firm Mubadala, which has committed to partner with PT Chandra Asri Petrochemical to build a $2.5 billion-petrochemical plant in Java.

According to a press release from the Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry on Friday, the total planned investment from the UAE in the oil and gas sector stood at $9.7 billion, up to $1.3 billion of which is for investment in the Balikpapan refinery, the integrated supply chain (LPG and Naphta) and LPG storage. (hen)

  • Renewables
26 July 2019

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  • Indonesia

Indonesia’s Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources expects an addition of 185 MW of new geothermal power generation capacity to be added until the end of 2019 by the plants of Lumut Balai, Muara Laboh, Sorik Marapi, and Sokoria.

Four geothermal power plants (PLTP) with a total capacity of 185 megawatts are targeted to start commercial operations until the end of 2019.

The four plants are Lumut Balai Unit 1 PLTP in South Sumatra with a 55 MW capacity operated by PT Pertamina Geothermal Energy (PGE), Muara Laboh Unit 1 PLTP in West Sumatra with an 80 MW capacity by PT Supreme Energy, Sorik Merapi 1 PLTP in Sumatra North with a capacity of 45 MW by PT Sorik Merapi Geothermal Power, and Sokoria 1 PLTP in NTT with a capacity of 5 MW by PT Sokoria Geothermal Indonesia with a capacity.

Director of Geothermal Energy at the Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources Ida Nuryatin Finahari said that his side continues to push for a new renewable energy mix (EBT), especially geothermal energy, to continue to increase. The commercial operation date (COD) target of geothermal plants has increased in 2019 from last year’s realization.

Whereas in 2018 there were only two PLTPs that carried out COD, namely the Sarulla PLTP Unit 3 in the Sibual Buali geothermal working area (WKP), North Sumatra, with a capacity of 110 MW and Karaha PLTP in the Karaha Cakrabuana WKP, West Java, with a capacity of 30 MW.

In addition to encouraging COD for a number of geothermal plants under construction, the ESDM Ministry also encouraged the realization of WKP work that had been completed during the exploration period. The latest, the Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources awaits a proposal from PGE in managing the WKP Kotamobagu.

The proposal contains a work program from PGE in managing the Kotamobagu WKP. PGE is expected to be able to send proposals as soon as possible so that the development of the power plant in the WKP can be immediately implemented. Moreover, currently the ESDM Ministry is pushing for an EBT mix of 23 percent by 2025 to be realized soon.

“Now it’s just waiting for when they submit a proposal that contains a work program. We expect it as soon as possible,” so news from Indonesia.

We will report from the 7th Indonesia International Geothermal Conference & Exhibition from Jakarta 13-15 August 2019.

Source: Bisnes

  • Renewables
26 July 2019

 – 

  • Indonesia

Kuning Industrial Estate the province as a national strategic project. (Antara/M. Rusman)

State electricity firm PLN plans to build the country’s biggest hydropower plant (PLTA) in North Kalimantan, aiming to power the Tanah Kuning-Mangkupadi industrial and port zone (KIPI).

PLN director for strategic procurement 1 Sripeni Inten Cahyani said Friday that the project’s power capacity will stand at 1,350 megawatts (MW) and will operate six years from now.

“The project will be supported by the smelter industry in KIPI Tanah Kuning. Electricity demand in the area can only be fulfilled by a hydropower plant,” she said in Jakarta.

Her statement came after a meeting in the Office of the Coordinating Maritime Affairs Minister with Minister Luhut Pandjaitan, as well as officials from the Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry.

Luhut said the project’s investment was estimated to stand at US$2 billion. “I asked that the project begin construction next year,” he said.

During the same event, Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry electricity supervision director Hendra Iswahyudi said the project was part of the efforts to reach renewable energy targets of 23 percent of the national energy mix by 2025.

“North Kalimantan is rich with hydropower potential, so why don’t we develop [power plants]. We as the regulator will push for electricity from renewable energy,” he said.

According to PLN’s electricity procurement plan (RUPTL) for the 2019-2028 period, the Kayan River in North Kalimantan could generate electricity of 6×150 MW and there is also the potential for seven more hydropower plants with total capacity at 3,350 MW. (est)

  • Renewables
25 July 2019

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  • Malaysia
  • Thailand
  • Vietnam

s the global energy transformation continues to gain momentum, renewable energy employment dimension ensures socio-economic sustainability and provides yet another reason for countries to commit to renewables.

Beyond pursuing climate goals, many governments have prioritised renewables as a driver of low-carbon economic growth. Diversification of the supply chain has broadened the sector’s geographic footprint beyond a few leading markets, as more countries link sustainable technology choices to broader socio-economic benefits.

Increasingly, countries envisage a domestic renewable energy industry taking the place of unsustainable fossil-based industries.

The sector now employs at least 11 million people worldwide, with more countries manufacturing, trading and installing renewable energy technologies every year according to the latest analysis by the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA). This compares with 10.3 million in 2017.

As more and more countries manufacture, trade and install renewable energy technologies, the latest Renewable Energy and Jobs – Annual Review finds that renewables jobs grew to their highest level despite slower growth in key renewable energy markets including China.

The diversification of the renewable energy supply chain is changing the sector’s geographic footprint. Until now, renewable energy industries have remained relatively concentrated in a handful of major markets, such as China, the United States and the European Union. Increasingly, however, East and Southeast Asian countries have emerged alongside China as key exporters of solar photovoltaic (PV) panels.

Countries including Malaysia, Thailand and Viet Nam were responsible for a greater share of growth in renewables jobs last year, which allowed Asia to maintain a 60 per cent share of renewable energy jobs worldwide.

“Beyond climate goals, governments are prioritising renewables as a driver of low-carbon economic growth in recognition of the numerous employment opportunities created by the transition to renewables,” said Francesco La Camera, Director-General of IRENA.

“Renewables deliver on all main pillars of sustainable development – environmental, economic and social. As the global energy transformation gains momentum, this employment dimension reinforces the social aspect of sustainable development and provides yet another reason for countries to commit to renewables.”

Solar photovoltaic (PV) and wind remain the most dynamic of all renewable energy industries. Accounting for one-third of the total renewable energy workflow, solar PV retains the top spot in 2018, ahead of liquid biofuels, hydropower, and wind power. Geographically, Asia hosts over three million PV jobs, nearly nine-tenths of the global total.

Most of the wind industry’s activity still occurs on land and is responsible for the bulk of the sector’s 1.2 million jobs. China alone accounts for 44 per cent of global wind employment, followed by Germany and the United States. Offshore wind could be an especially attractive option for leveraging domestic capacity and exploiting synergies with the oil and gas industry.

The solar PV industry retains the top spot, with a third of the total renewable energy workforce. In 2018, PV employment expanded in India, Southeast Asia and Brazil, while China, the United States, Japan and the European Union lost jobs.

Globally, the solar PV industry installed 94 gigawatts (GW) of capacity during 2018, the same amount as in 2017. China, India, the United States and Japan were the most important installation markets, followed by Australia, Germany, the Republic of Korea, and Turkey.

A recent listing reveals that 50 leading solar PV panel manufacturers maintain factories in 23 countries. China remains dominant, accounting in 2018 for 69% and 64% of global cell and module capacities, respectively.

All Asian countries as a group (excluding India) held shares of 92% and 85%, respectively. Japan, the Republic of Korea, and Chinese Taipei are important producers. Driven by Chinese and other foreign investment, Malaysia, Thailand and Viet Nam are playing significant roles as producers and exporters. Viet Nam hosts facilities owned by 11 different manufacturers; Malaysia, 9; and Thailand.

IRENA estimates that global solar PV employment stood at 3.6 million jobs in 2018. Of the leading ten countries shown in Figure 6, eight are Asian (for the purposes of this report, Turkey is counted as part of Asia).

Overall, Asia is home to almost 3 million solar PV jobs (85% of the global total), followed by North America’s 6.4% share, Africa’s 3.9% and Europe’s 3.2%. This year’s global total is not directly comparable to the figure reported in last year’s edition.

It includes an off-grid jobs estimate of 372 000 jobs for South Asia and parts of Africa. Earlier editions did not have fully comparable estimates for these regions.

China, the leading producer of PV equipment and the world’s largest installation market, accounted for about two-thirds of PV employment worldwide, or some 2.2 million jobs. A strong pace of capacity additions in India (9.2 GW in 2018) led IRENA to raise its on-grid solar employment estimate from 92 400 jobs to 115 000 jobs, a number that could double if off-grid deployments were included.

Solar PV employment in the European Union declined by about 5% to 90 800 jobs in 2017, reflecting a drop of more than 10% in installations. Policy uncertainties caused US employment to fall for a second year in 2018, to an estimated 225 000 jobs.

Japan’s solar PV industry continues to face difficulties, including shortages of available land for deployment. Although the country’s installation market is still one of the world’s largest, additions in 2018 were below those of 2017. IRENA estimates that employment fell to 250 000 jobs in 2018.

Together, onshore and offshore wind employ 1.16 million people worldwide, up 1% from 2017. Most wind jobs are found in a small number of countries, although the concentration is less than in the solar PV sector.

China accounts for 44% of the global total; the top five countries represent 75%. The regional picture is also more balanced than in the solar PV industry. Asia’s 620 000 wind jobs make up about half the total, while Europe accounts for 28% and North America for 10%.

Of the top 10 countries shown in Figure 8, five are European, three are Asian, and one each is from North and South America. China remained the leader in new installations during 2018, adding 20 GW, of which 1.8 GW offshore.

The country’s total wind employment was estimated to hold steady at 510 000 jobs, followed by Germany (140 800 jobs) and the United States, where wind employment grew 8% to a new peak of 114 000 jobs.

Of all renewable energy technologies, hydropower continues to have the largest installed capacity. In 2018, it accounted for almost 50% of renewable energy in the world, but the share has declined as other renewables, in particular solar PV and wind, have grown faster than hydropower.

The analysis suggests that in 2018, over 2 million people were directly employed in the hydropower sector worldwide. Although the pace of new construction in key markets has slowed, the sector nonetheless experienced a growth of 3% over the previous year.

The distribution of employment across different segments of the value chain remains similar to previous years. More than 70% of the jobs are in operations and maintenance.

Construction and installation represent 23% of the total; manufacturing is characterised by lower labour intensity and contributes just 5%. Employment shares by country in 2018 provide interesting insights. India’s labour-intensive hydropower sector is the largest employer, accounting for 17% of the total, followed by China (15%) which experienced a decline in new installations.

Brazil, where hydropower provides 77% of electricity supply, accounts for 10 % of the total. Other large players are Viet Nam (6%), Pakistan (5%), the European Union and the Russian Federation (4% each), and Iran (Islamic Republic of) and the United States (3% each).

Major solar heating and cooling markets, including China and Brazil, continued their downward trend in 2018, while India and several other markets showed increased activity. IRENA’s estimates indicate that global employment in the sector declined to 801 400 jobs.

The top five countries account for 93% of all jobs. Asia is home to 711 000 jobs, 88% of the world total. Of the top 10, three countries are from Asia and three from Europe. Estimates for China suggest that employment held steady in 2018 from the previous year.

With more than 70% of global installed capacity and a strong position in export markets, the country also remains dominant in employment. In cumulative terms, the US is the second largest national market, followed by Turkey, Germany, Brazil, India and Australia.

The leading bioethanol producers all reached new output peaks in 2018. Biodiesel production also rose in many of these countries, but declined in Argentina and the European Union, and remained level in Australia, China, Malaysia and the Philippines.

Worldwide employment in biofuels is estimated at 2 million, an increase of 6% from 2017. Most of these jobs are generated in planting and harvesting of feedstock. Fuel-processing facilities tend to offer fewer jobs than does feedstock supply, but those jobs typically require higher technical skills and offer better pay.

Annual changes in biofuels employment, notably, do not always equate to net job gains or losses. Oil palm, soybean, corn, and other feedstocks are used for a range of agricultural and commercial purposes outside the energy sector, and their end-use may therefore vary from year to year without people losing jobs.

On the other hand, when people are displaced from their land by expanding biofuels plantations, agricultural livelihoods may be lost irretrievably. The regional profile of biofuels employment differs considerably from that of the solar PV sector.

Latin America accounts for half of all jobs worldwide, whereas Asia (principally labour-intensive Southeast Asian feedstock supply) accounts for 23%, North America for 16% and Europe for 10%. Figure 7 includes the top 10 countries, which together account for about 91% of global estimated employment.

Several factors shape how and where employment is generated along the renewable energy supply chain. These include governmental policies; the diversification of supply chains; trade patterns; and industry reorganisation and consolidation trends. Aside from these factors, which are discussed below, labour productivity grows in importance over time.

As renewable energy industries become more mature, gain economies of scale, navigate learning curves and turn more to automated processes, fewer people will be needed for a given task.

  • Energy Policy
  • Renewables
25 July 2019

 – 

  • Philippines

The Department of Energy is planning to set a ceiling price for new renewable energy players to attract investors and promote competition in the sub-sector.

In a statement on Thursday, Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi said, “the DOE has initiated a proposal to establish a Green Energy Rate for 2,000MW of new renewable energy generation capacity.”

Likewise, Cusi said the National Renewable Energy Board (NREB) is expected to submit its recommendations in the coming months.

“To be clear, the Green Energy Rate will not be a Feed-in-Tariff program and will not be subsidizing the renewable energy generation sector –they will need to be competitive with current market rates,” he added.

“Instead, the Green Energy Rate will support the RE generators with securing PSAs (power supply agreements) and selling their energy by setting a base-line price.”

Moreover, he noted that the DOE is committed to encourage competition among all the technologies.

“All energy options will be considered on the basis of affordability, reliability, security, and sustainability,” he said, adding, “It is important that we continue to develop renewable and indigenous energy sources in order to ensure long-term energy security.”

Cusi made the statement after President Rodrigo Duterte gave the directive during his fourth State of the Nation Address (SONA) to fast-track the development of renewable energy sources, and reduce dependence on fossil fuels.

“The DOE is encouraged by the President’s comments, indeed, his leadership will be pivotal for the DOE to implement policies and regulations that ensure the affordability, reliability, security and sustainability of energy in the Philippines for generations to come,” Cusi said.

“The Philippines is already a leader in sustainability: the World Energy Council has ranked the Philippines number 1 for energy sustainability on its Energy Trilemma Index since 2015,” he added. —LBG, GMA News

  • Energy Policy
  • Renewables
25 July 2019

 – 

  • Philippines

MANILA (Reuters) – The Philippines’ Department of Energy (DOE) on Thursday vowed to fast-track the implementation of two key renewable energy (RE) policies, following President Rodrigo Duterte’s directive to reduce the country’s dependence on coal.

Duterte issued the directive in an annual address to Congress on Monday.

The Southeast Asian nation aims to double its power generation capacity by 2030 to support a growing economy, but it still relies heavily on coal, the cheapest yet dirty fuel option.

Recent years saw the rash of approvals for coal-fired plants in the Philippines as it struggles to reduce the cost of electricity, among the highest in Asia, to attract more foreign investments.

Under the first policy, called the Renewable Portfolio Standards, Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi said power distribution utilities will be mandated to source a minimum portion of energy from renewable sources, thus guaranteeing a market for RE producers.

The minimum requirement will be increased gradually every year, he said in a statement, without specifying any timeline.

The second policy, called the Green Energy Option, “will empower consumers to demand that their energy is sourced from renewable resources,” Cusi said, without giving details.

He said the DOE will also establish a Green Energy Rate for 2,000 megawatts of new RE capacity, or a baseline price that will “support the RE generators with securing (power supply agreements) and selling their energy”.

“To be clear, the Green Energy Rate will not be a Feed-in-Tariff program and will not be subsidizing the RE generation sector,” Cusi said. “They (RE generators) will need to be competitive with current market rates.”

Cusi, however, said the country’s energy security requires diversification beyond RE, with liquefied natural gas and coal-fired power plants still considered as “the bridging-fuel we will need as we transition towards more RE”.

“The DOE is committed to encourage competition among all the technologies,” he said.

  • Renewables
25 July 2019

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  • Vietnam

NDO – Renewable energy is expected to generate 6.5% of the country’s total electricity in 2020 and 10.7% in 2030, Vietnam also aims to save 10% of energy of the total power consumption in 2020.

The information was released by the Electricity and Renewable Energy Authority (EREA) of the Ministry of Industry and Trade at a workshop held in Ho Chi Minh City on July 25 to launch a programme to boost the development of rooftop solar power in Vietnam.

According to Director of the EREA Phuong Hoang Kim, the Vietnamese Government has been more aware of the role of solar energy and energy saving in maintaining economic growth, ensuring energy security, and protecting public health and environment.

The Vietnam Low Emission Energy Program (V-LEEP), funded by the US Agency for International Development (USAID), is designed to attract investment from the private sector to invest in clean energy.

According to Michael Greene, Director of the USAID, through this programme, the US agency will support the Vietnamese Government to harmonise national strategies, laws, policies and regulations to encourage the development of clean energy.

Earlier, the Ministry of Industry and Trade had approved a programme to develop rooftop solar power in Vietnam between 2019 and 2025.

The industrial sector uses about 50% of the country’s total energy resources; hence, increasing energy saving and efficient use in the sector is a top priority to ensure national energy security.

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