How should we address nuclear risks in Asia?

CSIS.org – While North Korea would appear to be the most prominent nuclear risk in Asia, the United States faces a more complex web of nuclear challenges as it works to build secure and sustainable relationships in that region. More than ever, a strong U.S. role in nuclear energy and nonproliferation in that region will be crucial for reducing emerging nuclear risks.

Without a doubt, nuclear energy will grow fastest in Asia, given the ambitious construction plans of China and South Korea, and the tremendous energy needs of other emerging economies and exploding populations. This contrasts with Europe and the Americas, which are likely to see little growth or perhaps even decline in nuclear energy. Unlike in the 1970s when U.S. Nuclear exports dominated the global market, the nuclear power plants that will be constructed in Asia are much more likely to be “homegrown”—that is, built by Chinese, Japanese, and South Korean nuclear vendors. In all three cases, there is a tremendous learning curve in nuclear governance, for domestic and export programs.In China, the rapid pace of nuclear power plant construction (16 operating and 29 under construction) is placing strains on a relatively small regulatory system, prompting outside concerns that China needs more resources (financial and human) for nuclear regulation. After the March 2011 Fukushima nuclear power plant accident in Japan, China halted construction for a year although targets for growth have not changed. Tiếp tục đọc “How should we address nuclear risks in Asia?”

Ảnh hưởng của nhà máy điện hạt nhân của Trung Quốc và sự an nguy của tổ quốc

Tiến sĩ Bạch X. Phẻ
Tiến sĩ Trần Tiễn Khanh

Boxitvn – Nhân duyên chúng tôi, một người học môi sinh và một người học hoá, gặp nhau trên đất Thái trong dịp thuyết trình hai đề tài liên quan đến Môi sinh và cách thức lãnh đạo bằng chánh niệm tại Đại Lễ Phật Đản Vesak 2015 – Tam Hiệp của Liên Hợp Quốc. Sau những ngày tâm sự và làm việc chung, cũng như trước những băn khoăn và ưu tư hướng về Tổ quốc. Chúng tôi quyết định viết bài ngắn này để cho người dân nhận thức được những diễn biến có thể xảy ra liên quan đến sự an nguy của đất nước.  Trong năm 2015 này, có hai nhà máy điện hạt nhân của Trung Quốc đưa vào hoạt động mà có thể ảnh hưởng trực tiếp đến Việt Nam.

Trường hợp 1 –  Cảnh báo về Nhà máy điện hạt nhân ở Quảng Tây

Một nhà máy điện hạt nhân đang được hoàn thành ở gần thành phố Qinzhou thuộc Quảng Tây. Nhà máy mang tên là Fangchenggang, được khởi công xây dựng năm 2010 và sẽ bắt đầu hoạt động vào năm nay 2015. Trong giai đoạn 1, nhà máy có hai lò với công xuất 2000 MW và vốn đầu tư là $3.7 tỉ USD.  Còn có thêm 4 lò với công suất 4000 MW và tổng số đầu tư là $10.4 tỉ USD.  Với công suất rất cao này sự thiệt hại, nếu bị rủ ro tại nạn rảy ra thì de doạ đến tính mạng và đời sống của nhiều người dân.
Tiếp tục đọc “Ảnh hưởng của nhà máy điện hạt nhân của Trung Quốc và sự an nguy của tổ quốc”

Climate change should be top foreign policy priority, G7 study says

Theguardian – Global warming ‘ultimate threat multiplier’ posing serious risk to world security, says report urging governments not to see it simply as a climate issue

Turkana men carry rifles as they herd goats inside the Turkana region of the Ilemi Triangle, northwest Kenya December 21, 2014. The Ilemi Triangle is a disputed region in East Africa, claimed by South Sudan and Kenya, bordering also Ethiopia. The dispute arose from unclear wording of a 1914 treaty which tried to allow free movement of the Turkana people, nomadic herders who had traditionally grazed the area. Picture taken on December 21, 2014.
Armed Turkana men herd goats inside the Ilemi Triangle region, northwest Kenya. Water scarcity has made it a disputed territory in east Africa, claimed by South Sudan and Kenya. Photograph: Goran Tomasevic/Reuters

Tackling climate change risks must become a top foreign policy priority if the world is to combat the global security threat it poses in the 21st century, according to a new study commissioned by the G7 countries. Tiếp tục đọc “Climate change should be top foreign policy priority, G7 study says”

Hague climate change judgement could inspire a global civil movement

“886 Dutch citizens, including teachers, entrepreneurs, grandparents and students united to sue their government for its inaction on climate change. In a decision likely to reverberate across the world, the court ordered the state to reduce emissions by 25% within 5 years to protect its citizens from climate change.”

Theguardian – Dutch ruling could trigger similar cases worldwide with citizens taking their governments to courts to make them act on climate promises

Urgenda 's legal team celebrating after court ruling in The Hague
Urgenda’s legal team celebrate on Wednesday after court ruling in the Hague that ordered the Dutch government to cut emissions by 25% within five years. Photograph: Chantal Bekker/Urgenda

Tiếp tục đọc “Hague climate change judgement could inspire a global civil movement”

Climate Changes May Eradicate 50 Years Of World Health Progress (In Depth)

June 24th, 2015 by

Cleantecnica.com – “Recent decades have witnessed dramatic progress in global health,” says the US Agency for International Development. Smallpox has been eradicated within the past half century. In all but three countries (Afghanistan, Nigeria, and Pakistan), polio has been wiped out. Use of modern methods of contraception has increased from 10% in 1965 to more than 50% in 2013. Child deaths from diarrhea have been cut in half since 1990. Malaria deaths have fallen by more than a quarter globally since 2000. Only half as many mothers died in live childbirth in 2010, compared to 20 years earlier. Unheard of 50 years ago, HIV/AIDS has now transited from certain death to a chronic ailment.

Developed and developing photo, from Costello et al, 2009  (thelancet.com/journals/lancet/)But climate change could quickly wipe out the past 50 years of world health progress. Tiếp tục đọc “Climate Changes May Eradicate 50 Years Of World Health Progress (In Depth)”

Sự cự tuyệt của người thổ dân làm lung lay niềm tin của châu Á vào các kế hoạch khí đốt của Canada

Bloomberg.com – Các nhà đầu tư châu Á đang mất dần niềm tin vào khả năng cung cấp dầu và khí tự nhiên xuyên Thái Bình Dương khi mà một dự án xuất khẩu lớn khác cũng đã sa lầy do sự phản đối của người thổ dân bản xứ.

Một cộng đồng thổ dân ở Bờ Tây đã từ chối gần 1 tỉ Đô la tiền đền bù từ Công ty Xăng Dầu Quốc gia Malaysia, khiến cho tương lai của một trong những sự đầu tư xuất khẩu khí đốt tiên tiến nhất của Canada rơi vào tình thế nguy khốn. Đây là khó khăn mới nhất ngăn cản sự tiếp cận của châu Á tới nguồn năng lượng của Canada khi mà các đường ống dẫn và các trạm tiếp nhận cần thiết để vận chuyển nhiên liệu thô qua biển gặp phải sự phản đối của cộng đồng người bản xứ.

Sự cự tuyệt tập trung vào những rào cản mà Canada phải đối mặt trong các nỗ lực cạnh tranh với Mỹ và Úc nhằm thu hút nhu cầu nhiên liệu đang tăng lên của châu Á, ví dụ như 19 đề xuất nhằm thúc đẩy xuất khẩu khí đốt Bờ biển Thái Bình Dương Canada.
“Điều này gửi một dấu hiệu rất xấu tới thế giới rằng Đó hãy nhìn vào Canada”, Gord Nettleton – một cộng sự tại Calgary của hãng luật McCarthy Tetraut nói. [Calgary là một thành phố phía nam của tỉnh Alberta, Canada]. Sự từ chối này đặt ra một câu hỏi: “Làm thế nào để kiểm soát được căn nhà của chính bạn?” Tiếp tục đọc “Sự cự tuyệt của người thổ dân làm lung lay niềm tin của châu Á vào các kế hoạch khí đốt của Canada”

Last chance for Asean to adopt energy price transparency

Vietnam, amongst others, has electricity prices capped and differentiated for different users (the energy-intensive heavy industries being the most subsidised). More than US$2.5 billion is spent yearly to subsidise electricity prices from national utility EVN, distorting any competitive advantage renewable energy sources could have in a country with plenty of sun and wind resources.

The recent slump in oil prices represents a unique opportunity for Southeast Asia to move towards energy price transparency by cutting expensive subsidy programmes which have been around for decades.The current global cost of subsidizing energy consumption, mainly in developing economies is US$500 billion a year, the Paris-based International Energy Agency (IEA) estimates. This can be reduced to $400 billion, thanks to cheaper oil, leaving governments with the choice of continuing subsidies or dismantling these very costly programs for the sake of national budgets and economic fairness. Tiếp tục đọc “Last chance for Asean to adopt energy price transparency”

Vietnam pledges to adjust power price according to market mechanism, as proposed

TUOI TRE NEWS Updated : 06/12/2015 10:20 GMT + 7


Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung and Minister of Industry and Trade Vu Huy Hoang have pledged sufficient and stable power stable supply for foreign investors in the 2015-16 period.

Despite high power consumption in the past few months, the local electrical system still has 20 percent spare capacity that remains unused, Minister Hoang said at a forum in Hanoi on Tuesday in response to concerns of investors about the risk of power outages in the near future. Tiếp tục đọc “Vietnam pledges to adjust power price according to market mechanism, as proposed”

The Current State of Sustainable Energy Provision for Displaced Populations: An analysis

Author: Rebecca Gunning, Independent Sustainable Energy Consultant

This paper examines the benefits and impacts of sustainable energy access for displaced populations, considers the challenges to energy access and assesses the role of the private sector in delivering energy for displaced populations.

Photo: iStockphoto Photo: iStockphoto

By the end of 2013, the number of forcibly displaced persons worldwide had reached 51.2 million, of which 33.3 million were internally displaced persons (IDPs) and 16.7 million were refugees. Access to energy is a basic human need; for these displaced people however, access to energy is a real challenge. This initial research reviews camp situations (which are home to approximately 50% of refugees) and focuses on the evidence of the benefits and impacts of sustainable energy access for displaced populations. The paper also assesses how the private sector could help to provide energy for displaced populations. Tiếp tục đọc “The Current State of Sustainable Energy Provision for Displaced Populations: An analysis”

EU Cracks Down on China Solar Cheats

Doug YoungJun 8, 2015

Renewableenergyworld.com – A crackdown has officially begun on Chinese solar panel makers who skirted a deal to avoid anti-dumping tariffs in Europe, with word that the EU has taken formal action to punish 3 violators. The action will see anti-dumping tariffs imposed on Canadian Solar (Nasdaq: CSIQ), ReneSola (NYSE: SOL) and ET Solar, reviving a threat they previously avoided by agreeing to voluntarily raise their prices as part of a breakthrough deal in late 2013.

Western solar panel makers in the US and Europe had long complained that they were at an unfair disadvantage to their Chinese peers, which received a wide array of state subsidies through policies like cheap government loans and tax rebates for their exports. Washington responded by levying anti-dumping tariffs on the Chinese companies, while the EU took a more conciliatory approach by signing a deal that saw the Chinese agree to voluntarily raise their prices to levels comparable with their western rivals. Tiếp tục đọc “EU Cracks Down on China Solar Cheats”

Building a Low Carbon Future for Vietnam Technological and other needs for climate change mitigation and adaptation

Vietnam has the opportunity to become a regional leader on developing mitigation and adaptation strategies and technologies, particularly vis-à-vis the less-developed Mekong countries. Vietnam’s diverse climates, topography and ecosystems can provide a useful testing ground for piloting new mitigation and adaptation approaches. Moreover, Vietnam’s close ties with China will pose both opportunities and challenges that will shape the country’s climate change response.

Chathamhouse.org – Author: Heike Baumüller

  • Vietnam is one of the fastest growing economies in the world, averaging around eight percent GDP growth annually over the past five years. On a global scale, the Vietnam’s GHG emissions per capita are still minor, but rising rapidly. At the same time, Vietnam has a high stake in successful international action to address climate change given the country’s high vulnerability to the impacts of climate change which could threaten local livelihoods and major export interests.

Tiếp tục đọc “Building a Low Carbon Future for Vietnam Technological and other needs for climate change mitigation and adaptation”

Economics: Support low-carbon investment

Government policies are the sticking points. Carbon pricing, favourable tax regimes and rebalancing of subsidies will encourage demand for low-carbon capital. Supply will be increased by government support for research and development and improved financial policies. Countries that understand these dynamics will benefit from more private financing and clean growth, as are Vietnam and Germany now. Those that do not will be left squeezing the last remnants of value out of waning industries.

Nature.com – Private finance can drive the energy transformation needed to meet global emissions goals — if backed by the right policies, says Nathan Fabian.

Article tools PDFRights & Permissions

Illustration by Derek Bacon

Markets and governments are converging to address climate change. As scientific evidence and government actions strengthen, investors and financiers are reducing the exposure of their portfolios to risks from rising greenhouse-gas emissions. They are allocating more capital to low-carbon activities and less to carbon-intensive industries1. Tiếp tục đọc “Economics: Support low-carbon investment”

Việt Nam có nên tăng thêm giá năng lượng?

Thứ Hai, 08/06/2015 11:04 (GMT+7)

Doanhnhansaigon.vn – Nghiên cứu vừa hoàn thành của Phòng Thương mại châu Âu tại Việt Nam (EuroCham) và Viện Quốc tế về Phát triển bền vững (IISD) cho thấy, khả năng thu hút nguồn vốn FDI của Việt Nam không dựa trên năng lượng giá rẻ.

Chi phí điện chỉ chiếm khoảng 5-10% tổng chi phí doanh nghiệp FDI. Đa số doanh nghiệp được khảo sát sẵn sàng chịu được mức tăng giá điện 15%/năm.

Được sự hỗ trợ của EuroCham, IISD và Ủy ban Tăng trưởng Xanh (EuroCham GGSC) vừa hoàn thành nghiên cứu đánh giá quan điểm của nhà đầu tư nước ngoài đối với giá cả và nguồn cung năng lượng tại Việt Nam.

Năng lượng giá rẻ là yếu tố ít quan trọng Tiếp tục đọc “Việt Nam có nên tăng thêm giá năng lượng?”

China’s investment in renewables soars

Despite a slowdown in its economy and the continued reliance on coal, China is pumping billions of dollars into its renewable energy industry.

GLOBE-Net – By Kieran Cooke

LONDON, 30 May, 2015 − China invested more than US$89 billion in renewable energy projects in the country in 2014 – a growth of 31% on the previous year, according to a detailed report on the country’s energy sector.

The soaring increase is revealed in a report by the US government’s Energy Information Administration (EIA). But it adds that fossil fuels − particularly coal − still look set to continue to dominate China’s power sector.

Coal is by far the most polluting fossil fuel, and China is the world’s leading emitter of climate-changing greenhouse gases.

Wind power production went up by nearly 40% in the 2012-13 period. Although there are still big gaps in the transmission infrastructure, the aim is to generate 200 gigawatts (GW) of electricity from wind by 2020.

Government subsidies

“China is also aggressively investing in solar power and hopes to increase capacity from 15 GW at the end of 2013 to 100 GW by the end of 2020,” says the EIA. Substantial government subsidies have helped to fuel growth in the solar sector. Tiếp tục đọc “China’s investment in renewables soars”

Climate or the Economy? Vietnam´s Attempts to Balance Growth and the Environment

By Rabea Brauer | Vu Dang Tuan

Although Vietnam has very comprehensive frameworks for its climate and energy policy, there are justified doubts about the practicability of the strategy and its compatibility with economic development. This is reflected in the current climate and energy policy. Right now, it is impossible to consistently pursue the goal of balancing an effective climate policy with a low-carbon economy. This is because the goal is at odds with current developments in Vietnam’s energy sector. Germany Trade & Invest says that, in contrast to Germany’s energy policy, Vietnam has made the construction of coal-fired power plants a top priority, and this despite the fact that the country has considerable potential when it comes to renewable energies
(hydropower, biomass, nuclear energy).

CLIMATE OR THE ECONOMY? VIETNAM’S ATTEMPTS TO BALANCE GROWTH AND THE ENVIRONMENT

How do you achieve harmony between economic prosperity and a decisive climate policy? Governments all over the world are facing this dilemma and trying to tackle the serious challenges presented by the reciprocal relationship between economic policy and climate policy. Tiếp tục đọc “Climate or the Economy? Vietnam´s Attempts to Balance Growth and the Environment”