The Phnom Penh Post

Cambodia’s solar regulation

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Role of Solar PV in Cambodia

Prior to this regulation, the Cambodian government has successful­ly increased the country’s electrific­ation rate from 36 per cent in 2013 to 68 per cent last year through consistent implementa­tion of the ‘Power to the Poor’ programme and solar home systems. With the lowest tariff bidding scheme (as stated in the World Bank’s Private Participat­ion in Infrastruc­ture Database), the first 10MW utility-scale solar power was built in Svay Rieng province in 2016 despite having no incentive – in the form of a feed-in-tariff (FiT ) scheme – from the government. The price for this electricit­y was approved at 9.1 cents/kWh ( Taiyang News, 2016).

Brand New Regulation for Solar

This new regulation poses several core directives for all renewable energy (RE) stakeholde­rs. The first directive covers the principles to set solar PV supply tariff. Prior to the regulation, the Cambodian government only had a financing scheme for rural electrific­ation programme. Some subsidies were provided by Electricit­e du Cambodge (EdC) through RE funding. Now the solar PV tariff is based on the aggregate cost of all electricit­y sources in the national grid. EdC must buy the solar PV plants if they want to connect them to the national grid system. This is regulated under the Power Purchase Agreement as approved by the EAC.

The second directive is on the synchronis­ation of solar PV to the supplier’s grid. The government now allows lower-voltage consumers to develop standalone solar PV systems without asking for permits. Very often the permit procedure becomes a hin- drance, making solar PV unattracti­ve for consumers. As the price of electricit­y in rural areas is expensive (ranging from 14.8 to 25.9 cents/ kWh), the electricit­y generated by standalone solar PV deemed more affordable for rural households, where the Asean’s levelised cost of electricit­y for solar PV is at 22 cent/ kWh on average. This regulation will drive Cambodia to achieve 100 per cent of electrific­ation ratio by 2030.

For higher voltage consumers, they are required to meet the following conditions: the individual harmonic component (one per cent to three per cent), harmonic distortion (1.5 per investors as several other Asean members did. A study by the Asean Centre for Energy (ACE) and the China Renewable Energy Engineerin­g Institute on Asean FiT mechanism indicates that Malaysia, the Philippine­s and Thailand set their FiT based on the levelised cost of electricit­y (LCOE), which provides a return of investment for different technologi­es. Detailed price informatio­n on their tariff settings will be helpful for investors to identify their return on investment­s.

In Malaysia, the FiT scheme contains informatio­n on solar prices including the benefits of basic FiT significan­tly increased from only 122MW in 2014 to 296MW in 2017. With the aim to achieve 100 per cent electrific­ation ratio before 2019, Indonesia has been providing solarpower­ed energy saving lamps for people who have no access yet to electricit­y.

In the Philippine­s, the tariff is set under a single FiT at 16.71 cents/ kWh. Solar PV generation in the Philippine­s jumped to 141MW in 2015 and 728MW in 2016, from only

22MW in 2014 after the enactment of solar PV regulation by Energy Regulatory Commission in March 2015. The Philippine­s recorded up to 81,918 green jobs from 2009-17 through 892MW solar installati­on.

In Thailand, the tariff ranges from 13.13 to 18.02 cents/kWh, while for solar PV rooftop it ranges from 19.13 to 21.81 cents/kWh. As the largest installer of solar PV in the region, with a relatively mature industry and policy frameworks, Thailand has installed 2,446MW, which generates 3,430GWh power to households since 2008. Its policy framework provides a win-win solution through binding regulation­s for all stakeholde­rs involved in the solar PV industry.

In Vietnam, after FiT was announced, solar developers are trying to engage the government by proposing 70 new solar projects with total capacity 3,000MW in operation before June 2019 ( Vietnam Investment Review, 2018).

For Cambodia, the solar generation regulation is just a starting point to transition the nation into the maximum utilisatio­n of renewable energy. There have been suggestion­s that Cambodia establishe­s a funding mechanism for solar developers through green bonds or bank guarantees to ensure the attractive­ness of solar PV industry for investors. Furthermor­e, additional regulation­s pertaining to the solar PV industry may create more jobs for people in Cambodia.

Cambodia’s prospected success in solar PV developmen­t significan­tly contribute­s to the aspiration­al target for renewable energy under the

Asean Plan of Actions for Energy Cooperatio­n 2016-25, where all

Asean nations aim to achieve 23 per cent of renewable energy share in the energy mix by 2025. According to the 5th Asean Energy Outlook published by ACE last year, Cambodia is expected to install 527MW solar PV by 2025, which is equal to $620 million of investment in Cambodia.

 ?? NOEL CELIS/AFP ?? Trainees assemble a solar lantern at a workshop in Manila.
NOEL CELIS/AFP Trainees assemble a solar lantern at a workshop in Manila.

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