Gulf News

Harnessing the power of volcanoes

INDONESIA IS LOOKING TO ITS RED-HOT UNDERBELLY OF LAVA TO SOURCE CLEAN AND CHEAP ENERGY

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Columns of steam shoot from the ground at an Indonesian power plant sitting in the shadow of an active volcano, as energy is tapped from the red-hot underbelly of the archipelag­o.

Pipes zigzag up rugged mountainsi­des covered in tea plantation­s, carrying steam from the Earth’s core to power enormous, electricit­y-generating turbines at the Wayang Windu facility on Java island.

Indonesia, a seismicall­y-active island chain studded with scores of volcanoes, holds an estimated 40 per cent of the world’s geothermal energy reserves, but has long lagged behind in its use of the renewable power source.

Now, the government is pushing to expand the sector fivefold in the next decade, although the challenges are huge in a country where the burden of red tape remains onerous, big projects are often delayed and targets missed.

“The potential is tremendous,” said Rully Wirawan, field manager at Wayang Windu. “The current government is trying to tackle the challenges so I believe the developmen­t of the sector will be better in [the] future.”

Geothermal, a clean energy source that releases negligible amounts of greenhouse gases, unlike burning dirty fossil fuels, is mostly found in seismicall­y-active areas around tectonic plate boundaries.

The majority of Indonesia’s power, however, is generated from its abundant reserves of coal and oil. It currently has installed capacity to produce about 1,400 megawatts of electricit­y from geothermal, enough to provide power to just 1.4 million households in the country of 255 million.

But the government is aiming to increase Indonesia’s generating capacity to around 7,200 megawatts by 2025, as part of a broader plan to boost the renewables sector.

Still, the challenges are enormous. Ego Syahrial, the head of the government’s geology agency, which assesses geothermal energy reserves conceded: “The progress is not very encouragin­g.”

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 ??  ?? Above: Technician­s inspect machinery at the Wayang Windu geothermal power station on West Java in Indonesia.
Above: Technician­s inspect machinery at the Wayang Windu geothermal power station on West Java in Indonesia.
 ?? AFP ?? Left: A man watches as Mount Sinabung releases volcanic material into the air in Tiga Serangkai, North Sumatra, Indonesia.
Far left: A technician checking a control panel at the Wayang Windu geothermal power station.
AFP Left: A man watches as Mount Sinabung releases volcanic material into the air in Tiga Serangkai, North Sumatra, Indonesia. Far left: A technician checking a control panel at the Wayang Windu geothermal power station.
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