UN atomic chief backs nuclear power at COP28 as world reckons with proliferation

Rafael Mariano Grossi, the director-general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, speaks with The Associated Press at the COP28 U.N. Climate Summit, Thursday, Nov. 30, 2023, in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. (AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool)

Rafael Mariano Grossi, the director-general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, speaks with The Associated Press at the COP28 U.N. Climate Summit, Thursday, Nov. 30, 2023, in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. (AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool)

BY JON GAMBRELLUpdated 7:34 AM GMT+7, December 1, 2023 AP

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — The world wants more nuclear energy as a means to fight climate change and supply an ever-growing demand for electricity, part of a generational shift in thinking on atomic power, the head of the United Nations nuclear watchdog said Thursday.

Rafael Mariano Grossi, the director-general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, made the comments in an interview with The Associated Press at the COP28 climate talks. He called the inclusion of nuclear power at the summit, where he said a major nuclear agreement was likely, showed just how far the formerly “taboo” subject had come decades after the disasters at Three Mile Island and Chernobyl.

However, he acknowledged the challenge still posed for his agency in monitoring nuclear programs in countries, particularly in Iran after the collapse of its 2015 nuclear deal with world powers.

Tiếp tục đọc “UN atomic chief backs nuclear power at COP28 as world reckons with proliferation”

Nước Đức và tiếng gọi ở Phi châu

ANTG – Thứ Năm, 02/11/2023, 09:59

Thủ tướng Đức Olaf Scholz thăm Nigeria và Ghana trong khi Tổng thống Đức Frank-Walter Steinmeier cũng tới Tanzania và Zambia tuần này. Những chuyến công du cấp tập cho thấy tầm quan trọng ngày càng tăng của châu Phi – một khu vực mà trước đây Berlin ít quan tâm.

Khơi dòng năng lượng mới

Thủ tướng Đức Olaf Scholz đã đến Nigeria vào Chủ nhật (29/10). Đây là chuyến thăm đầu tiên của nhà lãnh đạo nước Đức tới Nigeria kể từ khi quốc gia Tây Phi này thành lập chính phủ mới dưới thời Tổng thống Bola Tinubu.

Thủ tướng Đức Olaf Scholz thăm Nigeria từ ngày 29 đến 31/10. Ảnh: DW

Tiếp tục đọc “Nước Đức và tiếng gọi ở Phi châu”

New Google geothermal electricity project could be a milestone for clean energy

A drill rig stands at a Fervo Energy geothermal site under construction near Milford, Utah, Sunday, Nov. 26, 2023. In Nevada, Fervo’s first operational pilot project has begun pumping carbon-free electricity onto the state's grid to power Google data centers, Google announced Tuesday, Nov. 28. Fervo is using the Nevada pilot to launch larger projects like this one in Utah. (AP Photo/Ellen Schmidt)

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A drill rig stands at a Fervo Energy geothermal site under construction near Milford, Utah, Sunday, Nov. 26, 2023. In Nevada, Fervo’s first operational pilot project has begun pumping carbon-free electricity onto the state’s grid to power Google data centers, Google announced Tuesday, Nov. 28. Fervo is using the Nevada pilot to launch larger projects like this one in Utah. (AP Photo/Ellen Schmidt)

BY JENNIFER MCDERMOTTUpdated 1:20 AM GMT+7, November 29, 2023Share

An advanced geothermal project has begun pumping carbon-free electricity onto the Nevada grid to power Google data centers there, Google announced Tuesday.

Getting electrons onto the grid for the first time is a milestone many new energy companies never reach, said Tim Latimer, CEO and co-founder of Google’s geothermal partner in the project, Houston-based Fervo Energy.

“I think it will be big and it will continue to vault geothermal into a lot more prominence than it has been,” Latimer said in an interview.

Tiếp tục đọc “New Google geothermal electricity project could be a milestone for clean energy”

A moment of truth for the oil and gas industry

Climate change and clean energy confront oil and gas producers with profound choices

Full report here

Oil and gas producers face pivotal choices about their role in the global energy system amid a worsening climate crisis fuelled in large part by their core products, according to our major new special report.

The Oil and Gas Industry in Net Zero Transitions finds that the oil and gas sector – which provides more than half of global energy supply and employs nearly 12 million workers worldwide – has been a marginal force at best in transitioning to an energy system with net zero emissions, accounting for just 1% of clean energy investment globally.

The report shows how the industry can take a more responsible approach and contribute positively to the new energy economy, highlighting that the UN’s COP28 climate summit in Dubai is “a moment of truth” for the oil and gas sector.To start, all oil and gas companies should commit to tackling emissions from their own operations, according to the report. These emissions need to decline by 60% by 2030 to align with the Paris Agreement goal of limiting global warming to 1.5 °C. Companies also need to dramatically change how they allocate their financial resources. In 2022, clean energy investments accounted for a mere 2.5% of the industry’s total capital spending. The report finds that producers looking to align with the aims of the Paris Agreement would need to put 50% of capital expenditures towards clean energy projects by 2030.What’s more, companies must abandon the notion that they can continue with business as usual simply by ramping up the deployment of carbon capture technologies.

The report finds that if oil and gas consumption were to evolve as projected under today’s policy settings, limiting warming to 1.5 °C would require an entirely inconceivable 32 billion tonnes of carbon capture by 2050, with annual investment rising from $4 billion last year to $3.5 trillion.Opportunities lie ahead despite these challenges, however. Nearly a third of the energy consumed in 2050 in a decarbonised energy system comes from technologies that could benefit from the oil and gas industry’s skills and resources, including hydrogen, offshore wind and liquid biofuels.

Infrastructure, planning and market keys to develop LNG power

VNN – November 23, 2023 – 07:46

HÀ NỘI — Infrastructure, planning and a market mechanism were among key issues that must be addressed in order to develop a market for liquefied natural gas (LNG) in Việt Nam, heard participants at a conference on LNG on Wednesday in Hà Nội.

Thị Vải Terminal, an LNG storage facility in the southern province of Bà Rịa-Vũng Tàu. — VNA/VNS Photo

Deputy head of the Electricity and Renewable Energy Department under the Ministry of Industry and Trade (MoIT) Bùi Quốc Hùng said the importation of LNG must follow international trade standards and regulations while Việt Nam is still lacking in many key areas including design, construction, and operation of infrastructure for LNG imports. 

Tiếp tục đọc “Infrastructure, planning and market keys to develop LNG power”

Phát triển bền vững thị trường điện khí: Điện khí LNG chờ khung giá

SGGP 22/11/2023 06:02 (GMT+7)

Mặc dù điện khí LNG nằm trong chiến lược quốc gia nhưng khó khăn lớn nhất hiện nay là chưa có khung giá cho điện LNG, nên các bên khó đàm phán ký kết hợp đồng tiêu thụ, dẫn đến nguy cơ chậm tiến độ.

Nguy cơ khó thực hiện mục tiêu

Những năm gần đây, nhu cầu sử dụng khí LNG trên thế giới tăng nhanh – với tốc độ 6,3% mỗi năm, đồng thời sản lượng LNG trên thế giới cũng đã tăng từ 340 triệu tấn năm 2017 lên 453 triệu tấn vào năm 2022. Tại Việt Nam, theo Quy hoạch Phát triển điện lực quốc gia đến năm 2030, tầm nhìn đến 2045 (Quy hoạch điện VIII) thì đến năm 2030, nguồn nhiệt điện khí sẽ chiếm tới 24,8% tổng công suất toàn hệ thống phát điện – chiếm tỷ trọng lớn nhất trong cơ cấu nguồn điện (trong khi nhiệt điện than, thủy điện, điện gió trên bờ và ngoài khơi lần lượt chỉ còn chiếm tỷ trọng là 20%, 19,5% và 18,5%).

Kho cảng Thị Vải chứa khí LNG. Ảnh: PV GAS

Tiếp tục đọc “Phát triển bền vững thị trường điện khí: Điện khí LNG chờ khung giá”

Fragile Equilibrium: LNG Trade Dynamics and Market Risks

A report by the International Energy Forum and SynMax

Download the Full Report

In just over half a century, the liquefied natural gas (LNG) industry has radically transformed from its nascent stages into a globally traded energy source. LNG trade has quadrupled over the past two decades and is poised to double again in the next 20 years.

While LNG trade is becoming more liquid and inclusive, it remains disproportionately concentrated in production and consumption. Three countries – Japan, China, and South Korea – accounted for half of the world’s total LNG imports in 2022. Meanwhile, another three – Qatar, Australia, and the United States – commanded a staggering 65% of global exports. Despite this stark concentration, the sector is interdependent, and supply disruptions in one corner of the globe can send shockwaves across the entire market.

Tiếp tục đọc “Fragile Equilibrium: LNG Trade Dynamics and Market Risks”

Khi nào người dân được lựa chọn mua điện từ các đơn vị bán lẻ trực tiếp?

thanhnien.vn 14/11/2023 19:43 GMT+7

Mặc dù Đảng và Nhà nước chủ trương xóa bỏ độc quyền đối với ngành điện, và Tập đoàn Điện lực Việt Nam (EVN) không còn độc quyền sản xuất điện, nhưng người dân và doanh nghiệp hiện chỉ có một lựa chọn duy nhất là mua điện của EVN. Thế độc quyền đó có thể thay đổi không, và sẽ thay đổi như thế nào?

Lộ trình tiến tới thị trường bán lẻ điện cạnh tranh

Xóa độc quyền trong ngành điện được tính đến từ hơn 10 năm trước theo 3 cấp độ: thị trường phát điện cạnh tranh, thị trường bán buôn điện cạnh tranh và thị trường bán lẻ điện cạnh tranh. Từ năm 2012, thị trường phát điện cạnh tranh chính thức vận hành với 32 nhà máy tham gia. Đến năm 2020, số đơn vị tham gia đã có hơn 100 nhà máy. Đến nay, EVN không còn độc quyền phát điện, chỉ sở hữu 37%, các doanh nghiệp tư nhân sở hữu 42%, còn lại do các doanh nghiệp nhà nước khác, các dự án BOT nắm giữ và một tỷ lệ nhỏ khoảng 1% là điện nhập khẩu. 

Tiếp tục đọc “Khi nào người dân được lựa chọn mua điện từ các đơn vị bán lẻ trực tiếp?”

Hệ lụy khó lường

nld.com.vn 13-11-2023 –

Ba dự án thủy điện bậc thang Đắk R’lấp 1, Đắk R’lấp 2, Đắk R’lấp 3 trên sông Đồng Nai được Bộ Công Thương đưa vào Quy hoạch Điện VIII khiến nhiều người lo ngại hàng trăm hecta vùng lõi Vườn Quốc gia (VQG) Cát Tiên và rừng phòng hộ Nam Cát Tiên sẽ biến mất.

Theo hồ sơ đề nghị bổ sung quy hoạch của Công ty CP Đầu tư – Phát triển năng lượng sạch Tây Nguyên (doanh nghiệp đề xuất), vị trí 3 dự án thủy điện Đắk R’lấp 1, 2, 3 nằm chủ yếu trong phân khu bảo vệ nghiêm ngặt của rừng đặc dụng VQG Cát Tiên (tả ngạn sông Đồng Nai, thuộc tỉnh Lâm Đồng) và rừng phòng hộ Nam Cát Tiên (hữu ngạn sông Đồng Nai, thuộc tỉnh Đắk Nông), chỉ một phần nhỏ ở tỉnh Bình Phước nhưng cũng là đất rừng.

Chưa có số liệu chính thức bao nhiêu hecta rừng sẽ bị ảnh hưởng nếu triển khai 3 dự án thủy điện này. Theo hồ sơ đề xuất của doanh nghiệp đề xuất, diện tích chiếm đất của 3 dự án là 197 ha, trong đó có đến 145 ha rừng. Song, cơ quan chức năng tỉnh Lâm Đồng xác định diện tích chiếm đất của 3 dự án này còn lớn hơn nhiều, ít nhất phải 464 ha.

Tiếp tục đọc “Hệ lụy khó lường”

Vietnam will struggle to meet 2030 offshore wind goal, top official says

Reuters.com

HANOI, Nov 9 (Reuters) – Vietnam will have a hard time reaching its offshore wind power target for 2030, a top executive at a state-owned energy company said, with foreign investors also warning of multiple regulatory hurdles that would need to be cleared.

The Southeast Asian country has good offshore wind power potential given strong winds and shallow waters near densely populated areas, according to the World Bank, which estimates the sector could add at least $50 billion to Vietnam’s economy.

Offshore wind is also a priority for Group of Seven (G7) members that have promised funds to boost the country’s renewable energy sources and reduce its reliance on coal.

Tiếp tục đọc “Vietnam will struggle to meet 2030 offshore wind goal, top official says”

Power scramble – 3 parts

Can Anyone Challenge China’s Near Monopoly On Metals Powering Our Tech? – Part 1/3 | Power Scramble


CNA Insider
– 3-11, 2023

We want the newest gadgets, the most advanced electric vehicles, and a fully electrified future, but behind all of that is a class of critical metals: rare earths. These are the only metals in the world, to date, that can be used to create powerful and portable magnets, essential to everything from EVs to wind turbines. So why the worry? For decades, China has maintained an iron grip on the entire supply chain for rare earths. Today, demand is skyrocketing for rare earths, because the world is racing to electrify just about every part of our lives. Kartik Kuna is the first outsider to gain filming access to a particular magnet factory in Dongguan, China – one of many Chinese factories that are producing a huge majority of the world’s rare earth magnets. Just why is it so hard to outcompete China in this space? Kartik also witnesses for himself a startling statistic – China is building up offshore wind power capacity at breakneck pace… all of which requires rare earths. Tiếp tục đọc “Power scramble – 3 parts”

After a Decade of Fossil Fuel Investing, Can China Fulfill Its Promise of a “Green” Belt and Road Initiative?

wri.org October 24, 2023 By Lihuan Zhou and Ziyi Ma Cover Image by: xiaoke chen/iStock

A decade ago, China launched the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), an ambitious effort to finance infrastructure around the world. Since then, Chinese investments made through the BRI have become an integral part of the global infrastructure landscape — particularly in developing countries — with estimates of $1 trillion or more invested across 152 countries.

Unfortunately, the first 10 years of the BRI were dominated by fossil fuel investment, with $52 billion invested in coal power alone according to the China Overseas Finance Inventory.

But the next decade could look very different: At the 2021 UN General Assembly, China announced it would cease building new coal plants abroad and instead step up investment in renewable energy, a commitment reiterated by President Xi Jinping at the latest BRI summit in October 2023.

Tiếp tục đọc “After a Decade of Fossil Fuel Investing, Can China Fulfill Its Promise of a “Green” Belt and Road Initiative?”

No decision on use of nuclear energy yet, Singapore to keep options open

CNA.com

Minister for Trade and Industry Gan Kim Yong says Singapore needs to build capabilities to understand advanced nuclear energy technologies.

No decision on use of nuclear energy yet, Singapore to keep options open
A view of a nuclear power plant. (Photo: AFP/Abdul Goni)

SINGAPORE: Singapore has not made any decision to deploy nuclear energy yet but must keep its options open and build expertise in the area, Minister for Trade and Industry Gan Kim Yong said on Monday (Oct 23) during the Singapore International Energy Week. 

Mr Gan said on the first day of the annual event that Singapore was exploring low-carbon energy sources, including hydrogen and nuclear energy. 

The use of nuclear energy was one of three possible scenarios previously set out by Singapore in its Energy 2050 Committee Report released last year. The report identified nuclear energy as a potential power source to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050, with this form of energy potentially able to supply about 10 per cent of the country’s needs. 

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Fukushima’s Nuclear Wastewaters Have Been Released. Now What?

34,303 views Oct 10, 2023 #Radioactive#CNAInsider#Japan

Japan has completed phase one of wastewater release from the Fukushima-Daiichi nuclear disaster. Despite assurances from the government and IAEA representatives that the water’s radioactive particles, specifically Tritium, are not harmful, many in Japan and the region are not appeased.

Insight’s Genevieve Woo travels across Fukushima to find out what has happened since the release. She finds fishermen off the coast of Japan who are worried about their livelihoods. Meanwhile, China and Hong Kong seafood curbs continue. What repercussions will the wastewater have on Japan and its neighbours? What has happened one month after the water release? And does the data support further release of waters?

00:00 Introduction

01:30 Activists protest discharge of radioactive water

05:34 Treating radioactive wastewater before release

08:07 Fukushima’s fishermen unhappy

13:00 Impact on Fukushima’s tourism industry

17:59 People living near the plant react to the release

23:42 How much radiation is there really?

28:18 Distrust towards TEPCO and the Japanese government

35:08 China’s import ban on Japanese seafood

37:13 Does the rest of Japan have fears about the wastewater release?

42:41 Japan’s future nuclear power plans

=============== ABOUT THE SHOW: Insight investigates and analyses topical issues that impact Asia and the rest of the world.

Southeast Asia’s Clean Energy Transition: A Role for nuclear Power?

Edited by David Santoro & Carl Baker

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TABLE OF CONTENTS


EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
David Santoro & Carl Baker 1
1 INDONESIA POWER SECTOR
Elrika Hamdi 5
2 MALAYSIA ENERGY LANDSCAPE AND REQUIREMENTS 2022-2050
Sabar Hashim 19
3 MYANMAR’S ENERGY LANDSCAPE
Shwe Yee Oo 39
4 RE-ENERGIZING THE PHILIPPINES’ NUCLEAR POWER PROGRAM: OPPORTUNITIES
AND CHALLENGES
Julius Cesar Trajano 59
5 SINGAPORE’S ENERGY JOURNEY: NET-ZERO, NEW PERSPECTIVES & NUCLEAR?
Denise Cheong & Victor Nian 75
6 THAILAND’S ENERGY LANDSCAPE AND THE POTENTIAL ROLE AND PLACE OF
NUCLEAR TECHNOLOGY
Doongnyapong Wongsawaeng 93
7 ENERGY LANDSCAPE AND REQUIREMENTS OF VIETNAM
Nguyen Nhi Dien 107
ABOUT THE AUTHORS 127

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