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Cop: Indonesian energy firms reaffirm net zero efforts

  • : Crude oil, Electricity, Emissions
  • 24/11/12

Major Indonesian energy firms reaffirmed their commitment to decarbonisation at the UN Cop 29 climate summit in Baku, Azerbaijan, but also indicated the challenges they face in achieving targets.

Indonesian state-owned utility PLN is in the process of redesigning its national electricity plan and from now until 2040 needs to add around 102GW of additional capacity, the firm's president director Darmawan Prasodjo said yesterday. Out of this, 75pc is to come from renewable energy, 5GW from nuclear power and 22GW from gas.

But there is a mismatch between the location of large-scale renewable energy resources such as geothermal and hydropower plants, and demand centres, said Darmawan.

Up to 70,000km of transmission lines have to be built to move energy from those resources to the centre of demand, said Darmawan. Additionally, a smart grid is also necessary to deal with intermittency in variable renewable energy sources such as wind and power. But the price tag to develop these transmission lines and smart grid would amount to a whopping $235bn over 2024-40.

State-owned energy firm Pertamina has allocated 8pc of its capital investment towards new and renewable energy over 2025-29, said its chief executive officer John Anis, without disclosing the exact amount.

The company also identified targets it hopes to achieve by 2029 as part of its low-carbon business growth, such as 60mn kilolitres of biofuels sales, 1.4GW of geothermal capacity and 1.5mn t of CO2 reductions with carbon capture and storage (CCS).

The firm also declared support for the zero routine flaring initiative by the World Bank. "Pertamina is one of the most important oil and gas companies in southeast Asia, producing more than 1mn b/d, and is a key factor for the Indonesian economy," said Demetrios Papathanasiou, global director for the World Bank, emphasising the importance of Pertamina's move to develop oil and gas without gas flaring.

Companies need to diversify, divest and decarbonise, said Retina Rosabai, director and group chief financial officer of coal firm Indika Energy. To diversify, firms first need to divest, because funding is limited, she said, adding that Indika has divested from coal-related assets, coal contract mining and coal logistics. But there is still much uncertainty over rules and regulations, although Indonesia's new climate envoy Hashim Djojohadikusumo reaffirmed the country's commitment to climate goals, which will raise confidence, Retina said. Hashim is the brother of Indonesian president Prabowo Subianto, who took office last month.

Hashim also reiterated that CCS holds huge potential in Indonesia, with an estimated 500 gigatonnes of CO2 storage capacity. Additionally, the country has also verified 575mn t of CO2 for offtake, with some parties already making commitments to purchase various amounts, he said. The government is also finalising the assessment of a further 600mn t of CO2, which is expected to be offered in the next few months, he said.


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24/11/12

California RD plant signals later start up

California RD plant signals later start up

New York, 12 November (Argus) — An long-delayed project to convert a Bakersfield, California, oil refinery to produce renewable diesel (RD) has been given another extension for start up. Global Clean Energy Holdings, working to open a 15,000 b/d RD refinery, and trading house Vitol agreed last week to adjust the terms of a supply and offtake deal singed in June. The initial agreement said that Vitol could exit the agreement if the refinery was not producing at least 5,000 b/d of renewable diesel by the end of October, but that deadline has now been moved to 15 December. Global Clean Energy told Argus last month that it still has "plans in place to complete the remaining work and start up the facility" despite recently cancelling an agreement with its principal contractor. Vitol, after an initial three-year term, can now request up to three one-year extensions of the contract, up from two in the initial deal. The agreement, which cleared the way for former business partner ExxonMobil to exit, stipulates that Vitol will be the exclusive supplier of feedstocks to the plant and exclusive marketer of all fuel and environmental attributes. The revised agreement also says that if Global Clean Energy modifies its credit agreement to allow for more than $330mn in debt financing, then the renewable fuels producer will have to pay Vitol an additional fee that increases as more funds are borrowed. Global Clean Energy declined to clarify whether it had already triggered the obligation to pay Vitol the excess fee, saying that it could not provide more information ahead of filing its quarterly investor report "in the near future." If the plant begins operations as planned, it will have to contend with a challenging investment environment for biorefineries given recently low environmental credit prices and uncertainty around how president-elect Donald Trump will enforce a new federal clean fuels tax credit. At the same time, California regulators agreed last week to update the state low-carbon fuel standard, including by setting stricter carbon intensity targets that start next year. The regulatory updates lifted the prices of credits used for program compliance, which are a crucial source of revenue for companies bringing lower-carbon fuels like renewable diesel into the state. By Cole Martin Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Cop: MDBs to up climate financing to $170bn/yr by 2030


24/11/12
24/11/12

Cop: MDBs to up climate financing to $170bn/yr by 2030

London, 12 November (Argus) — A group of leading Multilateral Development Banks (MDBs) estimated they could increase climate financing to $170bn/yr by 2030, they said today at the UN's Cop 29 climate conference in Baku, Azerbaijan. The group, made up of the World Bank and nine other MDBs including the European Investment Bank (EIB), today estimated their annual financing for low- and middle-income countries at $120bn/yr by 2030, of which $42bn for adaptation. For high income countries the group plans to reach financing of $50bn/yr, including $7bn for adaptation. The ten MDBs provided a total of $125bn of financing in 2023 , up on $100bn/yr in 2022. Of last year's funding $75bn went to low- and middle-income countries and $50bn to high-income countries. The MDBs hope to leverage an additional $130bn/yr of financing from the private sector, split equally between high-income countries on the one hand and middle- and low-income ones on the other. The split between private and MDB finance implies that the organisations are hoping to increase the efficiency with which they mobilise private finance, according to Melanie Robinson, Global Climate, Economics and Finance Director at NGO World Resources Institute. Financing from MDBs will be one of the main layers of climate financing contributing towards the New Collective Quantified Goal (NCGQ), a new goal on international climate financing for developing countries. Negotiations on the NCQG began today in Baku, with countries' positions "far apart," Robinson said. Participants' stances still differ on the amount of money which should be aimed for, and on which countries should contribute, which is to be expected at this stage of the negotiations, she said. By Rhys Talbot Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Cop: Brazil to release detailed 2035 climate plan


24/11/12
24/11/12

Cop: Brazil to release detailed 2035 climate plan

Baku, 12 November (Argus) — Brazil will release a detailed climate plan for 2035, covering all sectors of the economy, on 13 November, the country's environment minister Marina Silva said on the sidelines of the UN's Cop 29 climate summit in Baku, Azerbaijan. Brazil had already announced that it will reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by between 59-67pc by 2035, compared with 2005 levels , but had not released its new nationally determined contribution (NDC) — climate plan to be submitted to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). The new NDC will include emissions reduction targets for the agriculture, transport and industrial sectors and will also reiterate the country's commitment to eliminating deforestation across all biomes, environment minister Marina Silva said. Brazil will seek to increase its agricultural output through productivity gains, rather than expansion into new areas. "We have the potential to double agricultural output without destroying the forest," she added. "We want to lead by example," Silva said. Brazil will host Cop 30 next year in Belem. Regarding the election of Donald Trump as US president, she pointed out that global efforts to protect the environment are not going to be diminished because of political cycles. "The US is an important country and the second largest CO2 emitter globally," Silva said, adding that many US states have "their own independent climate policies, which will not be suspended." Alongside Brazil, two countries have also announced new emissions reduction goals under their updated NDCs: the UAE and the UK . All Cop parties have to submit their 2035 NDCs by February next year. Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Cop: Negotiators positive on remaining Article 6 talks


24/11/12
24/11/12

Cop: Negotiators positive on remaining Article 6 talks

Baku, 12 November (Argus) — Negotiators have a "positive attitude" towards outstanding talks on Article 6 of the Paris Agreement taking place at the UN Cop 29 climate conference in Baku, Azerbaijan, bolstered by the finalisation of crediting mechanism standards yesterday. The adoption of two key Article 6.4 standards on Monday night kicks off remaining talks on a very positive note, Switzerland's lead negotiator on international carbon markets under Article 6, Simon Fellermeyer, said. The approval has set the mood for remaining negotiations, lead Article 6 negotiator for New Zealand Jacqui Ruesga added. Article 6 of the Paris accord aims to help set rules on global carbon trade. Negotiators have already seen a more constructive attitude to discussions since the failed talks at Cop 28 in Dubai last December, Ruesga said. This was spurred on by disappointment at the lack of outcome last year, and supported by a number of informal meetings organised in the lead-up to June's Bonn climate conference, as well as increasing direction from heads of delegation on the subject. Divergence persists on some issues, but negotiators still have this positive attitude, Ruesga said. Different sides have also begun communicating the reasons behind their positions more clearly, Article 6 negotiator for Colombia Adriana Gutierrez added, which she hopes will help bring a result this year. Outstanding questions include how to deal with reporting inconsistencies and credit authorisations. Countries also still disagree on the question of whether Article 6.2's international registry should be capable of holding internationally transferable mitigation outcome (Itmo) units, or simply provide an accounting function. But talks on this point are progressing along the lines of deciding which potential functions of the registry could be integrated or dropped in the view of opposing sides, Ruesga said. The first ever Itmo transfer, which took place between Switzerland and Thailand earlier this year , would have been much easier through such a registry, Fellermeyer said. Gutierrez expects most remaining topics to be concluded ahead of Cop 30 in Belem, Brazil, next year. But some smaller, more technical elements are "bound to stick through" to the next summit, Ruesga said. There is not much appetite to reopen most elements for discussion next year, Fellermeyer said, meaning it could be that they are either concluded in Baku or left in a state of "constructive ambiguity". Agreement in Baku on the remaining Article 6 elements is important to give confidence to potential participants, Fellermeyer said, having encountered parties who declined to cooperate through the mechanism owing to a lack of visibility on the rules. By Victoria Hatherick Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Cop: UK sets ambitious 2035 climate target


24/11/12
24/11/12

Cop: UK sets ambitious 2035 climate target

London, 12 November (Argus) — The UK government has set a target to cut all greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by at least 81pc by 2035, from a 1990 baseline, the country's prime minister Keir Starmer said today at the UN Cop 29 climate summit in Baku, Azerbaijan. The target, which will form the basis of the UK's next national climate plan, is in line with recent recommendations from the independent advisory Climate Change Committee . Energy minister Ed Miliband sought the committee's guidance shortly after the Labour government was elected in July. Starmer urged all countries to come forward with new national climate plans — known as nationally determined contributions (NDCs) — at Cop 29. Details of the UK's new NDC are not yet clear, but Starmer said his government is "fully committed" to its pledge of zero-emissions power by 2030. He also repeated his promise for a "government that trod lightly on people's lives". "The UK is stepping up as a climate frontrunner at a time when such leadership is critically needed, co-founder of think-tank E3G Nick Mabey said. "We hope to see detailed implementation plans — ideally with sectoral commitments and a supporting investment roadmap — to lend credibility to its submission." The energy transition "is a huge opportunity", Starmer said, pointing to global appetite for renewables investment. And he noted the "advantage of being a first mover". The country's Labour government, elected in July, has diverged substantially from the previous administration on climate issues. The UK government today announced a "clean industry bonus" — a provisional £27mn ($34.6mn) per GW of offshore wind, to incentivise offshore wind developers to invest in industrial areas, many of which are rooted in the oil and gas industry. This will boost "green jobs" and support sustainable industry, the government said. By Georgia Gratton Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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