Draft natural gas rules in the Philippines ignore high costs and economic consequences

IEEFA.org September 04, 2023 Sam Reynolds

Key Findings

The Philippines spent nearly US$90 million on its first two shipments of liquefied natural gas (LNG). The price tag for just two cargoes should be a warning sign for the exorbitant LNG import bills to come. 

   

The Department of Energy’s draft circular aiming to make the country “a major player” in Asia “through the development and operation of LNG facilities” could increase the country’s dependence on one of the most expensive fuels available. 

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Court says renewable firms can seize Spain’s property after subsidy cuts

Climate Change News | 4 August 2023

A Spanish solar plant in 2022 (REUTERS/Guillermo Martínez)

London’s High Court has ruled that two investors in Spanish solar energy plants are entitled to seize a Spanish property in London to enforce a judgment in a long-running dispute over renewable energy incentives.

The court’s interim charging order – meaning it is not yet final and can be objected to by the debtor – was issued on Wednesday but made public on Friday.

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‘Shadow fleet’ oil tankers pose growing risk in SEA

southeastasiaglobe.com

An armada of poorly regulated, scrapyard-ready tankers is hauling sanctioned oil through the region’s bustling shipping lanes. With that, they’re carrying an ever-present threat of environmental catastrophe

IAN HOLLINGER AUGUST 29, 2023

‘Shadow fleet’ oil tankers pose growing risk in SEA
Smoke rises from the oil tanker Pablo after it suffered from multiple explosions on 1 May off the coast of Malaysia. The ship was registered to Gabon and was part of the so-called “ghost fleet” of little-regulated tankers. Photo courtesy of the Malaysian coast guard.

On the morning of 3 May, residents of Batam, Indonesia, the largest city of the country’s Riau Islands, woke up to beaches black with oil. 

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Renewables Competitiveness Accelerates, Despite Cost Inflation

IRENA.org

Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, 29 August 2023 – The fossil fuel price crisis has accelerated the competitiveness of renewable power. Around 86 per cent (187 gigawatts) of all the newly commissioned renewable capacity in 2022 had lower costs than fossil fuel-fired electricity.

Renewable Power Generation Costs in 2022, published by the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) today shows that the renewable power added in 2022 reduced the fuel bill of the electricity sector worldwide. New capacity added since 2000 reduced the electricity sector fuel bill in 2022 by at least USD 520 billion. In non-OECD countries, just the saving over the lifetime of new capacity additions in 2022 will reduce costs by up to USD 580 billion. 

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Fossil Fuel Subsidies: WHY DO WE CARE ABOUT FOSSIL FUEL SUBSIDIES?

IFM.org

Why do we care about fossil fuel subsidies?

Subsidies are intended to protect consumers by keeping prices low, but they come at a substantial cost. Subsidies have sizable fiscal consequences (leading to higher taxes/borrowing or lower spending), promote inefficient allocation of an economy’s resources (hindering growth), encourage pollution (contributing to climate change and premature deaths from local air pollution), and are not well targeted at the poor (mostly benefiting higher income households). Removing subsidies and using the revenue gain for better targeted social spending, reductions in inefficient taxes, and productive investments can promote sustainable and equitable outcomes. Fossil fuel subsidy removal would also reduce energy security concerns related to volatile fossil fuel supplies.

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Measuring Fossil Fuel Subsidies

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Trillions Wasted on Subsidies Could Help Address Climate Change

worldbank.org

WASHINGTON, June 15, 2023 – Trillions of dollars are wasted on subsidies for agriculture, fishing and fossil fuels that could be used to help address climate change instead of harming people and the planet, a World Bank report says.

The report, Detox Development: Repurposing Environmentally Harmful Subsidies, says global direct government expenditures in the three sectors are $1.25 trillion a year—around the size of a big economy such as Mexico. To subsidize fossil fuel consumption, countries spend about six times what they pledged to mobilize annually under the Paris Agreement for renewable energies and low-carbon development.

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Fossil Fuel Subsidies Surged to Record $7 Trillion

IMF.org

Credit: Marcin Jozwiak/Unsplash

Scaling back subsidies would reduce air pollution, generate revenue, and make a major contribution to slowing climate change

Simon BlackIan ParryNate Vernon

August 24, 2023

Fossil-fuel subsidies surged to a record $7 trillion last year as governments supported consumers and businesses during the global spike in energy prices caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the economic recovery from the pandemic.

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Financing the Coal Transition

Rocky Mountain Institute

This report aims to contribute to growing conversations about coal finance mechanisms, particularly as they move from concept to reality. RMI believes that financial mechanisms can be a transformational tool in coal transition efforts—but only if implemented well. Ultimately, the devil will be in the detail as to how financial mechanisms are designed and governed to meet the critical needs of all stakeholders and help deliver a rapid and smooth pathway to a climate-safe future.

RMI’s report, Financing the Coal Transition, shows how financial mechanisms can complement policy and regulation to help achieve a rapid, equitable, and smooth coal transition.

The economics of power generation are shifting rapidly in favor of clean energy, challenging coal’s long history as a mainstay of economic development throughout the world. However, much more work needs to be done to transition the existing coal fleet in line with climate and development goals.

The privileged place coal has occupied in power generation for over a century has entrenched complex barriers—from the way that grids have been built to the incentive structures within electricity systems—that prevent markets from catching up to the economic trend toward clean energy. In the absence of solutions to address these barriers, the costs of uneconomic coal will fall largely on local communities through direct costs and unpriced impacts on local health and the environment.

The global community needs new solutions to address the social and economic complexities of the coal transition while responding to the urgency of the climate challenge. One set of solutions currently under development are the innovative financial mechanisms designed to support the transition from coal to clean energy.

This report helps make sense of the various financial mechanisms proposed to date, and models the impacts of using different financial mechanisms to transition existing coal power plants. While it finds that financial mechanisms have the potential to generate wins for both the climate and communities, it also recognizes the risks of using finance to support the coal transition. To manage these risks, RMI proposes five key principles to guide the design of credible financial mechanisms.

five key principles to guide the design of financial mechanisms for coal transitionFive key principles to guide the design of financial mechanisms for coal transition

Download report here

Explainer: Why nuclear-powered France faces power outage risks

reuters.com Reuters

December 9, 20227:02 PM GMT+7Updated 8 months ago

Visit at EDF's Penly Nuclear Power Plant

[1/2]View of French utility EDF’s Penly Nuclear Power Plant in Petit-Caux, near Dieppe, France, December 9, 2022. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier Acquire Licensing Rights

  • Companies

PARIS, Dec 9 (Reuters) – France is bracing for possible power outages in the coming days as falling temperatures push up demand while state-controlled nuclear group EDF struggles to bring more production on line.

WHY CAN’T FRANCE MEET DEMAND?

France is one of the most nuclear-powered countries in the world, typically producing over 70% of its electricity with its fleet of 56 reactors and providing about 15% of Europe’s total power through exports.

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The human cost of France’s nuclear tests in the Pacific

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4UFe4tRMZ0Y

Al Jazeera English – 10-8-2023

For 30 years, France undertook nuclear testing in its Pacific territory, French Polynesia.

In recent years, investigations have revealed the effects of the tests were far greater than France has officially acknowledged.

A total of 193 nuclear tests were undertaken, including 41 atmospheric tests that exposed the local population and site workers to high levels of radiation.

Today, children across the Pacific islands are still dealing with the nuclear fallout.

Cancer and other developmental diseases plague new generations born after the last test in 1996.

101 East investigates the costs of France’s nuclear tests in French Polynesia.

Điện gió ngoài khơi: Nguồn năng lượng của tương lai – Cần sàng lọc các dự án điện gió ngoài khơi khả thi

(TN&MT) – Quy hoạch phát triển điện lực quốc gia thời kỳ 2021 – 2030, tầm nhìn đến năm 2050 (Quy hoạch Điện VIII) vừa được Thủ tướng Chính phủ phê duyệt với định hướng phát triển các loại hình năng lượng tái tạo chiếm tỷ lệ lớn trong công suất nguồn điện của Việt Nam. Trong đó, điện gió ngoài khơi (ĐGNK) dự kiến sẽ có bước nhảy vọt từ 6GW năm 2030 lên tới 70 – 91,5GW vào năm 2050.

Trò chuyện với phóng viên Báo Tài nguyên và Môi trường xung quanh mục tiêu này, TS. Dư Văn Toán – Viện Nghiên cứu Biển và Hải đảo (Bộ TN&MT) cho rằng, Kế hoạch thực hiện Quy hoạch Điện VIII sắp ban hành cần sàng lọc được các dự án ĐGNK khả thi đối với Việt Nam trong giai đoạn đến năm 2030.

ts-du-van-toan.jpg

PV: Ông nhận định như thế nào về mục tiêu 6GW đến năm 2030 trong Quy hoạch Điện VIII, thưa ông?

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Đề xuất mua bán điện trực tiếp, không cần qua EVN

tienphong.vn

TPO – Theo phương án được Bộ Công Thương xây dựng trình Thủ tướng, các doanh nghiệp sử dụng điện lớn sẽ có thể mua, bán điện trực tiếp với đơn vị phát điện từ năng lượng tái tạo thông qua đường dây riêng, không do Tập đoàn Điện lực Việt Nam (EVN) quản lý.

Bộ Công Thương cho biết, đã hoàn tất xây dựng cơ chế mua bán điện trực tiếp để trình Thủ tướng Chính phủ xem xét. Theo đó, Bộ Công Thương đề xuất hai trường hợp mua bán điện trực tiếp giữa đơn vị phát điện tái tạo với khách hàng sử dụng điện lớn thuộc nhóm sản xuất.

Phương án 1, doanh nghiệp có thể mua bán điện trực tiếp thông qua đường dây riêng do tư nhân đầu tư (không phải mua bán điện thông qua EVN).

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As Projects Decline, the Era of Building Big Dams Draws to a Close

e360.yale.edu

Escalating construction costs, the rise of solar and wind power, and mounting public opposition have led to a precipitous decrease in massive new hydropower projects. Experts say the world has hit “peak dams,” which conservationists hail as good news for riverine ecosystems.

BY JACQUES LESLIE • APRIL 20, 2023

The end of the big dam era is approaching.

Numerous recently published reports reflect this planet-altering fact. One study, conducted by scholars at the United Nations University’s Institute for Water, Environment and Health, found that construction of large dams globally fell from a late-1970s peak of about 1,500 a year to around 50 a year in 2020. “There will not be another ‘dam revolution’ to match the scale of the high-intensity dam construction experienced in the early to middle 20th century,” the 2021 study concluded.

Data compiled by the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA), an intergovernmental organization that promotes renewable energy, including hydropower, show that in the 21st century, newly installed hydropower capacity peaked in 2013 at 45,000 megawatts a year and then dropped every year but one through 2021, when it reached only 18,900 megawatts. Similarly, investments in new hydropower dropped from a peak of $26 billion in 2017 to an estimated $8 billion in 2022, according to IRENA.

Dam building in China declined sharply around 2015 and has stagnated ever since.

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Cần có cơ chế giữ chân nhà đầu tư quốc tế (cho điện gió)

Note: “Tập đoàn Orsted, Tập đoàn năng lượng lớn nhất Đan Mạch và nhà phát triển điện gió ngoài khơi lớn nhất thế giới, mới đây đã tuyên bố giảm mục tiêu tham vọng và rút khỏi thị trường Việt Nam.

petrovietnam.petrotimes.vn

Năng lượng gió thì vô hạn nhưng nguồn lực đầu tư, vốn thì hữu hạn. Nếu không có những chính sách, cơ chế cụ thể thì nguồn lực đầu tư này sẽ chuyển từ Việt Nam sang những khu vực khác trên thế giới.

Các tổ chức quốc tế đánh giá Việt Nam có tiềm năng về điện gió lớn nhất Đông Nam Á, vượt xa các quốc gia khác. Hội đồng năng lượng gió toàn cầu (GWEC) đã ước tính, Việt Nam có khoảng 600 GWh điện gió chưa khai thác, gồm 300 GWh điện gió ngoài khơi và 300 GWh điện gió trên bờ.

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