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  • Others
9 May 2019

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  • ASEAN

The world has 11 years left, as reported by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) to beef up its efforts to reduce global temperatures before it crosses the threshold leading to climate catastrophe. While ASEAN countries have expressed their joint commitment through national pledges to take action and fight climate change, they are also focusing on developing their nations as well. GlobalData’s lead economist for Construction Industry, Danny Richards, said that construction output among ASEAN member states will grow six percent annually over the next five years.

However, the building sector accounts for 39 percent of global carbon emissions, where 28 percent is from building operations (heating, cooling, lighting, etc.) and 11 percent is attributed to embodied-carbon emission which refers to carbon that is released during the construction process and material manufacturing. Cement and steel emit eight percent and nine percent, respectively of the total amount of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in the world.

Director of the World Green Building Council (World GBC), James Drinkwater, says that once a building of high-embodied-carbon emission is constructed, those emissions add to the total amount of carbon in the air. The construction sector can reduce carbon emission by using materials with low or no embodied carbon.

Architects too can play a part in this process with their creative designs. They can limit the environmental impact of the buildings they design by reducing GHG emissions. This can be done by innovating with technology and influencing the choice of materials used.

Bamboo as a mitigation strategy

The International Bamboo and Rattan Organisation (INBAR) suggests that bamboo can play a significant role in helping countries meet the United Nations’ (UN) sustainable development goals or SDGs and help combat the effects of climate change. Across Southeast Asia, bamboo architecture is growing in popularity and bamboo is fast becoming the material of choice for architects. Vo Trong Nghia, a Vietnamese architect has pledged to bring nature back into the urban environment through the use of sustainable materials, notably bamboo. Architecture is defining a new regional and local identity through projects using bamboo to demonstrate a sensitivity to the land, environment and culture.

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Source: Various

The preference for bamboo is perhaps due to its availability and inherent strength. Bamboo comes from the botanical family of grasses that is resistant to tensile stress. The culm, a term for its thin and hollow stem and the tension resistant fibre within makes it easy to bend in extreme ways without breaking; making the material superior to timber and even comparable to steel. It grows faster than wood and under favourable conditions can have healthier, stronger and flexible culm. Though bamboo is designated as a material for low load bearing structures, it has the potential to replace steel in construction as evidenced by the construction of big span, multi-purpose halls and schools. In Chiang Mai, the Panyaden Bamboo Sports Hall has won multiple awards for the use of bamboo as a modern structural material.

The bamboo market strengthens local value chains in countries like Vietnam, Thailand and Indonesia. It also costs less than steel by weight and can provide affordable, resilient infrastructure to communities in the region.

However, bamboo does have a few weaknesses including vulnerability to attacks by fungus, swelling and shrinking behaviour, all of which can be overcome with coating and treatments. Bamboo fibre can be extracted and combined with other materials to create a composite. It can also be used in residential and commercial buildings, as either an accenting material or main structural component. Unfortunately, in some countries like Malaysia, its usage in urban areas still proves to be a challenge as local building codes and standards do not recognise bamboo as a proper building material, especially with regards to fire safety.

Bamboo’s capacity to absorb carbon emission from the atmosphere makes it a viable material of choice to reduce global warming. Unfortunately, the construction industry currently prefers using glass, steel and stone for materials instead. In the few years left for mankind to slow down global warming, choosing sustainable alternatives for construction materials could be critical.

  • Oil & Gas
9 May 2019

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  • Philippines

MANILA, Philippines — First Gen Corp. expects to finalize a deal with its engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contractors and additional partners for its planned $1-billion liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal “in the next few months.”

The EPC contract for the LNG terminal is a toss up between two international firms, Texas-based Fluor Corp. and JGC Corp. of Japan, said First Gen executive vice president and chief commercial officer Jon Russell.

“Front-end engineering design (FEED) is already finished…We’re just finalizing the terms. We hope to make the decision in the next couple of months,” he said.

At the same time, First Gen is also in talks with several foreign and local potential investors as it eyes more partners for the massive project.

The project is currently being jointly pursued by First Gen with Tokyo Gas Co. Ltd., Japan’s largest natural gas utility.

“We’re in discussions with a number of entities…within the next few months, we may have an announcement,” Russell said.

“Hopefully leading to a final investment decision (FID) either late this year or early this year. That still allows us to meet the deadline to have the terminal ready  by 2024 when the Malampaya contract expires,” he said.

Construction of an LNG terminal usually takes four years to complete.

Even without the FID, First Gen and Tokyo Gas will proceed with the groundbreaking of the LNG facility on May 28, First Gen president and chief operating officer Giles Puno said.

“The way it works is we anticipate that we will bring in more partners. In the meantime, between ourselves and Tokyo Gas, we want to proceed already so the formal FID will have a complete group of owners,” he said.

FGEN LNG Corp., a subsidiary of First Gen, signed a joint development agreement (JDA) with Tokyo Gas in December last year to build the project.

Currently, First Gen owns 80 percent of the project while Tokyo Gas owns the remaining 20 percent. The Lopez firm is willing to sell down its stake and retain a good majority in the project, Puno said.

“We don’t intend to own the entire 80 percent, we can go down to 50 or 51 percent,” he said.

In terms of capital expenditure, bulk of the project’s spending will be made next year although initial ground work has already been prepared.

For this year, First Gen is spending up to $250 million this year, mostly going to its renewable energy arm Energy Development Corp., its chief financial officer Emmanuel Singson said.

The FGEN Batangas LNG terminal project is intended to serve the natural gas requirements of existing and future gas-fired power plants of third parties and FGEN LNG affiliates within the Batangas Clean Energy Complex.

The onshore storage and regasification terminal will have a capacity to supply three to five million tons of natural gas equivalent to 5,000 megawatts (MW) and is expected to cost more than $1 billion.

The Batangas Clean Energy Complex also houses approximately 2,000 MW composed of four gas-fired power plants – the 1,000 MW Santa Rita Power Plant, the 500 MW San Lorenzo Power Plant, the 414 MW San Gabriel Power Plant and the 97 MW Avion Power Plant.

Read more at https://www.philstar.com/business/2019/05/09/1916176/first-gen-nears-epc-deal-planned-lng-project#2Y5yQe0McATgTbmx.99

  • Energy Efficiency
9 May 2019

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  • Philippines

Senator Sherwin T. Gatchalian, chairman of the Senate energy committee, issued this statement as he expressed his gratitude to President Duterte for signing Republic Act 11285 or the Energy Efficiency Act which he authored in the Senate.

‘’The signing of this landmark law is very timely, especially now that our growing economy needs more power supply in the next few years. With this law, the additional power supply will not come in the form of new power plants, but in savings from energy efficiency and conservation,’’ Gatchalian said.

Gatchalian also said that the statute was also a win, not only for the government but also for ordinary consumers who stand to have more money in their pockets through energy efficiency and conservation measures.

‘’A 10 percent increase in energy efficiency will give an average Meralco (Manila Electric Company) household a P140 reduction in their monthly electricity bill, equivalent to an additional 5 kilograms of rice every month,’’ he explained.

  • Others
9 May 2019

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  • Singapore

FIRMS will be able to cut emissions by efficiently converting unwanted carbon dioxide into a potential money-spinner, using a new system developed by Japanese engineering firm IHI Corporation and the Institute of Chemical and Engineering Sciences (ICES), a unit of the Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*Star).

The reactor system, powered by a specially-developed catalyst, allows for more efficient conversion of carbon dioxide and hydrogen to methane. Methane is the main component of liquefied natural gas, which is used for most of Singapore’s electricity generation.

A small demonstration unit is being launched on Friday (May 10) at ICES on Jurong Island to show the process to potential customers. IHI is now scaling up the technology, which might hit the market as soon as next year.

IHI Corporation senior researcher Hiroyuki Kamata said the company is in talks with potential customers in both Singapore and Japan, with a larger demonstration unit to be set up in Japan. IHI has its own well-established technology to capture waste carbon dioxide from flue gas. Now, instead of storing the captured carbon dioxide to keep it from harming the environment, firms can efficiently convert it to a useful fuel.

This makes both environmental and economic sense for Jurong Island’s energy-intensive industries, with Singapore having introduced a carbon tax that applies to emissions starting this year, said IHI Asia Pacific general manager for regional marketing and business development Tang Shuquan: “These are producers of carbon dioxide and they are looking for solutions.” The tax applies to greenhouse gas emissions of 25,000 tonnes or more, at S$5 a tonne till 2023, going up to S$10-S$15 a tonne by 2030.

It would be particularly useful for power utilities companies, which generate large amounts of carbon dioxide, he added. Some of the power-generating firms on Jurong Island are existing IHI customers for other solutions.

More broadly, an effective catalyst cuts waste and reduces energy needs. “At the end of the day, catalyst development is a part of driving sustainability,” ICES executive director Peter Nagler told The Business Times. “We should develop catalysts that enable the reaction we want to have with the least chemical input and ideally the highest yield.”

The collaboration began at the end of 2011, when IHI approached A*Star for help in developing catalysts. Though IHI has been in Singapore since the 1960s, this was its first collaboration with a Singapore research institute. Said Dr Kamata: “At the time, we thought: If we want to deliver some technology solution to future clients, we need to do something more, which is not our traditional business.”

Nickel is the best catalyst for this process, but there are challenges in using it: The build-up of carbon deposits which eventually “choke the reaction”, impurities such as sulphur which “poison” the catalyst, and temperature increases resulting from the reaction.

“It’s a relatively simple process but the reaction conditions are very demanding,” said ICES principal scientist Armando Borgna.

To tackle these issues, ICES developed a catalyst comprising nano-nickel particles within the shell of a porous silica matrix. This prevents the particles from becoming less efficient due to sintering or clumping together, and allows the catalyst to stay stable and effective for longer, said ICES senior scientist Chen Luwei.

Compared to industry benchmarks, the new catalyst can last twice as long without being affected by impurities. It can also perform for at least 3,000 hours without any deactivation, which is not possible with usual catalysts, said Dr Borgna.

The collaboration combines each partner’s respective competencies, said Dr Nagler: ICES’s chemical know-how and IHI’s engineering expertise which allows it to build an ideal reactor. It is also in line with A*Star’s aim: “We want to translate scientific expertise, scientific knowledge, to something applicable to industry.”

The partnership has paved the way for IHI to explore collaborations with other A*Star units in the firm’s other business areas such as aerospace and transportation, noted Mr Tang.

Last year, IHI and ICES also began work on a different, higher-value catalyst which will help the conversion of carbon dioxide to olefins, chemical compounds that are used as feedstock in polymer production. The target is to achieve a good yield for commercialisation by around 2020 or 2022, said ICES scientist Poh Chee Kok, who is working on the project.

  • Energy Cooperation
9 May 2019

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  • Vietnam

Vietnam has gained yet another ally for its energy sector in the form of Sweden as the European country pledged assistance in clean energy development and energy-saving strategies.

According to Nhan Dan News, Swedish Minister for Foreign Trade Ann Linde said during a conference on Wednesday that her country will offer assistance to Vietnam’s energy sector in a bid to promote renewable energy and enhanced energy-saving methods.

Aside from helping boost Vietnam’s energy sector, Sweden also pledged to provide assistance for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). The goal is to help emerging businesses have a more solid foundation that should make it easier to adapt to the local market.

Vietnam’s Minister of Industry and Trade Tran Tuan Anh, for his country’s part, said Vietnam pledged to promote business ties between both sides to ensure that mutual developments will be achieved.

Aside from energy and business cooperation, Sweden said it will help the Asian country develop policies that will help bolster the Vietnamese economy. In line with economic growth, the Swedish government will provide assistance in infrastructure improvements and workforce training.

To be more specific, staff training will be provided to help the Vietnamese workforce develop the necessary skills that the fourth Industrial Revolution (Industry 4.0) will require.

Earlier this week, the Vietnam – Sweden Business Summit took place in Hanoi as part of Crown Princess of Sweden, Victoria Ingrid Alice Desiree’s state visit to the Asian country.

Vietnam Plus reported that over 1,000 delegates from various business sectors and ministries attended the event. Both Swedish and Vietnamese businesspeople took part in the summit that centered on sustainable strategies for the business realm.

During her speech, Crown Princess Victoria reaffirmed her country’s partnership with the Vietnamese government and its people. She said the strong bilateral ties were bolstered by five decades of exchange and cooperation.

Vietnamese Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Pham Binh Minh said the country is looking to obtain knowledge and experiential advice from one of the world’s most current countries as it aims to join the race towards Industry 4.0.

The Swedish Crown Princess’ Vietnam visit was made possible through the invitation of Vice President Dang Thi Ngoc Thinh as part of the celebrations that mark the two countries’ 50th year in bilateral cooperation.

According to Scand Asia, Sweden was the first country to establish diplomatic ties with Vietnam in 1969 and since then, both parties have tried to enhance relations and business exchange.

The bilateral cooperation helped spur Swedish tourism to Vietnam and the entry of Sweden’s top companies helped provide over 120,000 jobs for Vietnamese workers. Analysts are expecting to see more developments following the pledges on energy.

  • Others
9 May 2019

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  • Vietnam

Vietnamese conglomerate Vingroup has announced the establishment of VinBus Transport Service Co., Ltd., as it officially branches into passenger transportation. VinBus will operate completely under the non-profit model in order to contribute to the construction of a civilised and modern public transport system, reducing air and noise pollution for Vietnam’s major cities.

It is expected that VinBus will provide transport services from March 2020, starting in five big cities of Hanoi, Hai Phong, Da Nang, Ho Chi Minh City and Can Tho.

In order to meet the mobility needs of people, contribute to the construction of public transport networks and especially to reduce emissions and noise, VinBus will use 100 per cent electric buses. In the short term, the company will operate 3,000 electric buses produced by VinFast.

At present, the VinFast bus factory is in the process of building and installing its factory system. The establishment of VinBus is the next concrete step in Vingroup’s strategy to develop environmentally-friendly electric vehicles in general, and electric buses in particular.

Regarding business orientation, VinBus will operate under a non-profit model. Accordingly, 100 per cent of the profits will be reinvested by the company to improve service quality, develop the system and expand operations to bring civilised and modern public transport services to a large number of people.

Nguyen Viet Quang, Vice President and General Director of Vingroup, said: “From the start of joining the automobile-motorcycle manufacturing industry, we have determined to develop and disseminate environmentally-friendly electric cars, gradually replacing gasoline vehicles. Vingroup wants to join hands to solve the [sic] air and noise pollution in big cities, contributing to forming civilised habits, creating a fresh and modern living environment for people.”

  • Renewables
9 May 2019

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  • Indonesia

INDONESIA is one of the world’s outperformers for geothermal power, second only to the United States for overall installed capacity forecast in 2019, Fitch Solutions Macro Research said in a May 8 note.

Fitch Solutions’ estimates that Indonesia has 2 gigawatts of geothermal capacity in operation as of the end of 2018. “Even so, reports suggest that the country’s geothermal power potential remains largely untapped, and can accommodate far greater geothermal capacity,” said the note.

Noting that supportive regulations are in place to encourage investment in the geothermal sector, Fitch Solutions sees Indonesia’s total geothermal generation growth averaging 9.2 per cent year on year between 2019 and 2022, when it will overtake the US as the country with the largest geothermal capacity.

Despite its bullish outlook, Fitch Solutions identified risks such as artificially low government-regulated electricity tariffs, which restrict potential returns on investment; the government’s “stringent local content requirements and a preference for local firms in the tendering process”; and the country’s vast hydrocarbon reserves, which make thermal energy — produced by burning fuel such as coal — an attractive low-cost alternative to geothermal power.

The outlook for Indonesia’s coal energy, however, faces both short- and long-term risks. In a separate May 9 release, Fitch Ratings said it expects Indonesia’s lower coal production quota of 480 million tonnes, compared to the 528 million tonnes produced in 2018, to stunt the growth plans of some rated coal miners.

Moody’s Investors Service said on May 8 that regulatory and economic developments in Indonesia will weigh on the earnings of the country’s coal producers in 2019, while in the longer term, “carbon transition”and a continued slowdown in Asia’s coal demand poses a long-term risk to the credit quality of Indonesian coal miners. Moody’s expects pricing pressure on thermal coal to persist due to a global transition toward renewables and away from coal.

In other areas of renewable energy, Fitch Solutions identified Thailand as an outperformer in biomass and an attractive biomass power investment destination over the next decade. In a May 7 note, it noted strong government support for biomass power in Thailand, amid efforts to diversify the country’s energy mix.

  • Renewables
8 May 2019

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  • Cambodia

When the lights literally went out in many parts of Cambodia in February and stayed off in some areas during the following months, people immediately pointed their fingers at Prime Minister Hun Sen.

They accused the mercurial autocrat who has ruled the country for more than three decades of orchestrating the blackouts in middle- and low-income areas to boost public support for proceeding with the controversial Stung Cheay Areng Dam in Koh Kong province, despite environmental concerns that shelved the hydropower project in 2015.

On Feb. 19, Cambodia granted China’s Sino Resources Ltd., a holding company for China’s Sinohydro Group permission to conduct six months of extensive drilling, geological mapping, and prospecting in the concession for the proposed 108-megawatt hydropower project.

The government, which is dependent on energy imports from its neighbors to keep Cambodian households and apparel factories running, attributed the outages to high temperatures, a water shortage affecting the ability of existing dams to generate power, and high levels of electricity consumption by the public.

To make matters worse, Hun Sen ordered officials in early April to cut off electricity to the homes of those who had blamed the government, while he kept the electricity flowing to his mansion, the homes of his relatives and high-ranking officials, the royal palace, hotels, casinos, and Chinese-financed businesses and premises.

Three days later, his Council of Ministers approved a 39-year build-own-operate-transfer (BOOT) concession for the construction of the Chinese-backed Stung Pursat 1 Dam at a cost of U.S. $231 million.

To avoid criticism, the government concurrently approved two 60-megawatt solar energy plants — one in Pursat province and the other in Kampong Chhnang province — along with a 20-megawatt increase to an existing 60-megwatt solar energy plant in Kampong Speu province.

In the meantime, the electricity cuts are expected to last through May, with the national grid about 400 megawatts short of what is needed to power the country during the dry season.

Such scenarios are one reason why Cambodia should consider adding more renewable energy sources to its power mix, say analysts at think tanks and environmental NGOs, who also warn that building more hydropower dams is not the answer to electricity blackouts.

“There just isn’t enough power in Cambodia’s rivers during the dry season to use dams to keep the lights on,” said Brian Eyler, director of the Southeast Asia program and an expert on transboundary issues in the Mekong region at the Washington-based Stimson Center.

Power is in great demand in April and May during the height of the dry season, when Cambodia’s main engines of power — its coastal dams and the Lower Sesan 2 Dam located near the confluence of the critically important Sesan and Srepok rivers in Stung Treng province — run at extremely low efficiency rates, he said.

“Clearly, more hydropower is not the answer to alleviate dry season electricity demand, especially since climate change impacts are predicted to prolong the length of dry seasons in the coming decade,” Eyler said.

“The kingdom’s policymakers would be wise to expand scale solar capabilities as well as other renewable energy sources such as biomass and wind,” he said. “This would deliver a low-cost, climate-forward power system and put an end to these perennial blackouts.”

Cambodia well-positioned for solar

Cambodia currently has about 10,000 megawatts of hydropower potential, but also an estimated 8,100 megawatts of solar potential, and around 6,500 megawatts of wind power, according to energy researchers, think tanks, and the Asian Development Bank (ADB).

An offshore natural gas option is commercially viable, but not likely to be developed on account of a border dispute with neighboring Thailand, experts said.

Of all the countries in Southeast Asia, Cambodia may be the best positioned for solar-power generation with potential opportunities to rezone many massive economic land concessions (ELC) lying fallow from commodity projects that failed to materialize, Courtney Weatherby, a research analyst with the Stimson Center, said in February.

Because the land parcels are in areas with strong solar radiation for potentially profitable solar projects, “it’s worth it for the government to consider working with ECL landowners and rezone some of these for solar farms and open them up to auction and assist with the country’s energy supply,” she said.

Cambodia is unique among other Southeast Asian countries in that it has a National Council for Sustainable Development, a special interagency panel under the Ministry of Environment that brings together stakeholders and progressive decision makers from other ministries to discuss stable development issues, such as the country’s energy plans.

“No other country in the Mekong region has this,” Eyler said, adding that Say Samal, the country’s 38-year-old minister of the environment, and other council members have shown an eagerness to ramp up solar power and other renewable energy resources but still must win the support of their superiors.

Experts also say the time is ripe for making the move to sun power because the cost of solar has fallen while investor interest is rising, experts said.

In the past, the cost of solar technology was unaffordable for most developing countries, but prices have dropped dramatically on a global scale, particularly in the last five years because of overcapacity in China, shifts in innovation, and new financing and construction models, Weatherby said.

Cambodia has already had some early successes with rolling out a few solar projects. In 2017, a Cambodian-Thai-Lao joint venture began building a 15-megawatt solar plant in Kampong Speu province to provide power to a local industrial zone, the first of the company’s several planned solar projects in the region.

The Bavet Solar Farm, Cambodia’s first large-scale commercial solar power plant, was built in Svay Rieng province near the Vietnamese border and became operational in 2017, producing 10 megawatts of electricity which was sold to the grid.

Building on the success of the Bavet pilot project, the ADB, which financed the solar farm, is now moving ahead with the implementation of a plan to build a 100-megawatt National Solar Park in central Cambodia’s Kampong Chhnang province.

Despite its advantages, solar power must still overcome the downsides of the intermittency and seasonality of solar as well as limited storage capabilities, though the latter is quickly changing with technological advancements, Eyler said.

Cambodia's Lower Sesan 2 hydroelectric dam is seen during its inauguration in northeastern Cambodia's Stung Treng province, Dec. 17, 2018.
Cambodia’s Lower Sesan 2 hydroelectric dam is seen during its inauguration in northeastern Cambodia’s Stung Treng province, Dec. 17, 2018.Credit: AFP

Expensive electricity

The people of Cambodia, which rely on energy imports from the country’s neighbors, pay some of the highest electricity rates in all of the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) — as high as 25 U.S. cents per kilowatt hour in Phnom Penh and 80 cents in rural areas where people rely on imported diesel to power refrigerators and light bulbs, Weatherby said.

By contrast, residents of neighboring countries receive electricity subsidies and on average pay five to eight cents per kilowatt hour, she said.

Cambodia’s demand for electricity has been growing at an annual 10-20 percent clip, despite its current 2,400-plus megawatt capacity, versus nearly 4,000 megawatts in Thailand and more than 30,000 megawatts in Vietnam, Weatherby said.

Government estimates indicate that Cambodia’s annual electricity demand growth will average 9.4 percent through 2020, while a 2018 report by the International Renewable Energy Agency predicts a much higher figure of 150 percent-200 percent cumulative growth through 2025.

Alejandro Gonzalez-Davidson, founder of Cambodia-based environmental watchdog Mother Nature, believes that the Cambodia government’s recent short-term solutions to the current blackouts — including rotational power cutoffs around the country and requests for additional power purchases from neighboring nations — indicate a “serious failure” by officials to set and implement a correct vision for Cambodia’s  energy security toward independent power-development strategies.

“No one can deny this problem,” he told RFA’s Khmer Service. “Even schoolchildren know that the government has failed to provide public necessities, especially electricity demands. It’s a 100-percent failure.”

Gonzalez-Davidson said he prefers a solar-based solution to Cambodia’s energy crisis.

“It is far cheaper than hydropower dams, produces the least amount of environmental impact without having to evict residents, and can be constructed near Phnom Penh instead of far away in the middle of the forest where [construction] may cause deforestation,” he said.

Yang Saing Koma, a Cambodian agriculture expert turned politician, noted that the current power shortage occurred around the same time as the government had inaugurated the Lower Sesan 2 Dam — the country’s largest hydropower project ever built — with high expectations that it would generate up to 400 megawatts of power.

He said he was “quite surprised” that this year’s blackout began in February instead of in April or May as it usually does.

“This year, as early as February, our hydropower dams appeared to have run out of water, especially in relation to the Lower Sesan 2 Dam that the government originally expected to generate up to 400 megawatts of power to offset the power shortage,” he said.

“Eventually this dam’s power supply will not meet the government’s expectation,” said Yang Saing Koma, the founder of the Cambodian Center for the Study and Development of Agriculture and cofounder of the Grassroots Democracy Party.

Though some experts say that hydropower should continue to be a part of Cambodia’s energy mix, they contend that it should not be employed to the detriment of the Lower Mekong mainstream and the country’s Lake Tonle Sap, the country’s seasonally inundated freshwater lake with a river that connects to the Mekong mainstream.

Hydropower and coal

Cambodia’s most recent Master Energy Plan of 2016 focuses heavily on hydropower and coal power generation, but excludes non-hydropower renewable energy sources, primarily because the country had no commercial-scale solar or wind power until 2017, the Stimson Center said in a report issued in February.

Yang Saing Koma also pointed to the government’s 2030 electricity development policy for rural areas, which focuses on hydropower, coal, and electricity imports from adjacent countries.

“This policy is not widely open nor does it promote solar energy sources,” he said.

“This is a drawback that the government should correct to resolve the electricity shortage, which I believe will become more aggravated in the coming years due to rising and high demand,” he added.

Since the issuance of the last Master Energy Plan, Cambodia has dropped some hydropower projects and adjusted the energy mix to take advantage of now more affordable solar technologies, while planners at the Ministry of Mines and Energy are updating the plan on an annual basis, the Stimson Center’s report said.

Nevertheless, hydropower will continue to play a significant role in the Southeast Asian country.

Cambodia has seven operational dams mostly located along the coast, but plans to build 13 more that can together generate up to 1,300 megawatts supplemented by another 1,420 megawatts of electricity generated from coal, according to Electricité du Cambodge’s (EDC) 2016 annual report, the company’s most current report available online.

The country has more than 40 memorandums of understanding or feasibility studies for tributary dams in Cambodia’s portion of the Mekong, according to the Stimson Center.

It has yet to approve the construction of the China-backed 2,600-megawatt Sambor Dam on the Mekong River in Kratie province, which would be the country’s largest hydropower project with an 18-kilometer (11-mile) barrier across the waterway and an 82 kilometer-long (51 mile-long) reservoir behind it.

A government-commissioned report by the National Heritage Institute, a U.S.-based research and consultancy firm, that was leaked nearly a year ago found that the massive dam would “literally kill the Mekong,” dealing a devastating blow to fisheries by blocking fish migration from the vital Tonle Sap and spawning grounds upstream.

Cambodia’s proposed dams form part of a constellation of 11 large hydropower dams on the Mekong’s lower mainstream and 120 tributary dams planned by 2040 that will endanger the region’s ecology, economy, and food security, according to a February 2018 report by the Mekong River Commission, an intergovernmental organization that works directly with the governments of Cambodia, Laos, Thailand, and Vietnam to jointly manage shared water resources.

“Hydropower should be part of any power mix moving forward in the Mekong, but it shouldn’t be done at the expense of ruining fisheries within Cambodia or putting the country at the risk of a food security crisis,” Eyler said in February.

Cambodians dry fish in a village along the Tonle Sap River in Cambodia's capital Phnom Penh, January 16, 2019.
Cambodians dry fish in a village along the Tonle Sap River in Cambodia’s capital Phnom Penh, January 16, 2019.Credit: AFP

Fisheries under threat

Cambodia’s focus on building additional hydropower dams to support its economic growth instead of on water governance and ecology could backfire, said Hem Ouddom, an independent consultant specializing in energy, environment, and water governance issues.

“Once we do anything that may affect or pose a change to our ecology, our river will be affected, and eventually it will equally affect our national economic interest,” he said.

The Ministry of Agriculture’s Research and Development Institute found that if the Sambor Dam comes online, the country will lose 16 percent-31 percent of its fishery resources, and with it, the protein from fish that is vital to Cambodians’ diets.

The half-million tons of fish caught annually in the Tonle Sap alone contribute about 75 percent of Cambodians’ protein intake, the Stimson Center’s report said.

The continued building of dams will have other negative impacts, experts said.

“When we comprehensively analyze [the] impacts on our culture, traditions, society, migration, and loss of fishing livelihoods and biodiversity, it is difficult to calculate the monetary value,” Hem Ouddom said.

“When the government thinks only about economic value, somehow some developers forget to consider ecological costs,” he said.

Commitments to build more hydropower dams will bind Cambodia to long-term contractual obligations that could last for decades, he added, and suggested that the government put in place a decentralized electrification policy that focuses on non-hydropower renewable energy, and in particular solar power.

“This means that we should establish a policy of incentives for communities or households to generate their own power,” Hem Ouddom said.

“For example, by installing solar panels on the roofs of their houses, households can use this power without having to get connected to the national grid network,” he said.

Cambodia is already in a favorable position of being able to expand upon the success of two solar pilot projects, experts said.

In 2017, a consortium led by a Singapore developer with financial backing from the ADB built Cambodia’s first large-scale photovoltaic power plant, the 10-megawatt Bavet Solar Farm in Svay Rieng province near the border with Vietnam.

The ADB and EDC are now moving forward on the implementation of a 100-megawatt National Solar Park that builds on the Bavet Solar Farm and would improve the country’s limited power supply, bring technical benefits to the national grid, and diversify the generation mix with more clean energy.

The park will connect to EDC’s network in Kampong Speu and Kampong Chhnang provinces through a transmission system to a grid substation.

And in January 2018, Cambodia issued regulations to clarify the conditions for installing and operating solar systems in Cambodia, both large-scale and rooftop.

“As far as the [energy] mix goes, here’s a chance to turn Cambodia into the solar belt of Southeast Asia, so we look forward to more development moving forward,” Eyler said.

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