The Sun (Malaysia)

Southeast Asia ‘woefully off track’ on green investment

Region needs new policies and financial mechanisms to help bridge gap, says consulting firm

- SINGAPORE:

Southeast Asia is “woefully off track” on green investment­s to reduce emissions and needs new policies and financial mechanisms to help bridge the gap, global consultanc­y Bain & Company said yesterday.

With energy consumptio­n in Southeast Asia expected to grow 40% this decade, climate-warming carbon dioxide emissions remain on the rise, with the region still dependent on fossil fuels, said an annual report compiled by Bain, green investment group GenZero, Standard Chartered Bank and Temasek.

While green investment grew 20% last year, it is way short of the US$1.5 trillion required this decade, and emissions in the 10 countries in the region could overshoot their 2030 pledges by 32% if they continue on their current trajectory, it warned.

“We believe that an accelerati­on of effort by countries, corporates and investors is imperative as Southeast Asia remains woefully off-track,” said GenZero’s managing director Kimberly Tan.

Clean energy accounts for just 10% of total supplies, and fossil fuel subsidies are around five times higher than renewable investment­s.

High capital costs, as well as uncertain grid and tariff regulation­s, have also made it harder to finance renewable projects.

The report said 60% of the region’s coal-fired power plants were relatively new, meaning that they are still tied into long-term purchasing agreements and investment return commitment­s, making them far harder to shut down.

“There is over US$1 trillion of unrecovere­d capital in young coal plants and that’s predominan­tly in Asia,” said Internatio­nal Energy Agency economist Tim Gould.

“It doesn’t allow much room for renewables to grow ... so there is a need for creative financing approaches.”

Meanwhile, only four of the 10 countries in the region – Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and Vietnam – have made progress in putting a price on carbon.

The report called for more policies and incentives, greater regional cooperatio­n and a sustained focus on technologi­es that are already deployable.

“The good news is that Southeast Asia is very early on its decarbonis­ation journey so benefits from having many levers to reduce emissions today,” said Tan.

“Many of these are low-hanging fruit.”

The report identified 13 “investable ideas” that could bring in US$150 billion in revenues by 2030, including sustainabl­e agricultur­e and utility-scale renewable energy plants.

Southeast Asia is the second worst performing region when it comes to renewables investment, behind only Sub-Saharan Africa, according to an April report by Singapore’s Economic Developmen­t Board and the McKinsey consultanc­y.

The report said annual solar installati­ons needed to rise from the current rate of five gigawatts to 35 GW over the 2030-2050 period if regional net-zero pledges are to be met.

“We have all the resources, but the ‘unlock’ isn’t happening yet,” said Vishal Agarwal, a McKinsey senior partner. – Reuters

 ?? REUTERSPIC ?? A view of JTC and Sun Electric’s SolarRoof project in Singapore.
–
REUTERSPIC A view of JTC and Sun Electric’s SolarRoof project in Singapore. –

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia