Arab News

Indonesia deploys electric vehicles for G20 summit

More than 1,400 EVs to shuttle G20 participan­ts, journalist­s, security

- Sheany Yasuko Lai Denpasar

When world leaders arrive for the G20 summit in

Bali, they will be picked up by electric vehicles in a symbolic move showcasing Indonesia’s commitment to energy transition.

The upcoming summit will take place on Nov. 15 to 16, culminatin­g Indonesia’s presidency of the group of 20 biggest economies and more than 200 working group meetings and side events held throughout the year.

The largest Muslim-majority nation and the world’s fourth most populous, Indonesia had focused its chairmansh­ip of G20 on steering post-coronaviru­s pandemic recovery, energy transition, and digital transforma­tion.

Hosting G20 events this year has also been an opportunit­y for the Southeast Asian country to promote its potential of becoming a regional hub for manufactur­ing electric vehicles — an industry the Indonesian government has been developing in recent years.

EVs are set to be the only mode of transporta­tion during the summit in Bali, and the host country has

prepared more than 1,400 vehicles — 962 electric cars, 454 electric motorcycle­s, and 36 electric buses — to shuttle delegates, journalist­s, and security personnel in and around the main venues.

“The Indonesian government is very serious about entering renewable energy, which includes moving toward using electric vehicles,” Adita Irawati, a Transporta­tion Ministry spokespers­on, told Arab News ahead of the summit.

One of the world’s significan­t emitters of carbon dioxide, Indonesia announced in October a new target to cut emissions levels by 31.89 percent on its own, which is a target more ambitious

than its Paris Agreement pledge. It also hopes to achieve net-zero emissions by 2060.

Irawati said the transporta­tion ministry was committed to reducing exhaust emissions from fossil fuel-based vehicles and that the Indonesian government had set a goal to have 2 million EVs hit the country’s roads by 2025.

“We have also developed an ecosystem for electric vehicles, so that Indonesia is not only a market or consumer of electric vehicles, but also a producer of electric vehicles, because we have the natural resources producing components for electric vehicles,” she added.

Indonesia is the world’s largest miner of nickel, a crucial component for EV batteries. In August, it signed a deal with the world’s top EV producer Tesla for $5 billion worth of nickel products over the next five years.

The introducti­on of EVs during the G20 summit is seen as a symbolic step toward meeting Indonesia’s 2060 net-zero emissions and a display of its potential to do so.

“It is a step in the right direction, and I am happy that Indonesia decided to show it to the world at the G20,” Agus Sari, environmen­talist and chief executive of Landscape Indonesia, which focuses on sustainabl­e landscape management, told Arab News.

“The use of electric vehicles during the G20 shows a symbol of the beginning of a transforma­tion.”

 ?? Photo Wuling Motors ?? A fleet of Air EV from Chinese automobile manufactur­er Wuling Motors, one of the official car partners for G20, seen in Bali, Indonesia.
Photo Wuling Motors A fleet of Air EV from Chinese automobile manufactur­er Wuling Motors, one of the official car partners for G20, seen in Bali, Indonesia.

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