Dubai Telegraph - Indonesia coal plant closure U-turn sows energy transition doubts

EUR -
AED 4.327195
AFN 75.40939
ALL 95.584631
AMD 440.896605
ANG 2.108966
AOA 1080.472647
ARS 1609.495216
AUD 1.653073
AWG 2.114993
AZN 2.022191
BAM 1.954472
BBD 2.374356
BDT 144.971471
BGN 1.965473
BHD 0.444294
BIF 3554.269274
BMD 1.178269
BND 1.499175
BOB 8.146463
BRL 5.872617
BSD 1.178884
BTN 109.719498
BWP 15.796197
BYN 3.349623
BYR 23094.076215
BZD 2.370979
CAD 1.623714
CDF 2721.801452
CHF 0.921247
CLF 0.026548
CLP 1044.865275
CNY 8.033027
CNH 8.030883
COP 4234.98227
CRC 542.728834
CUC 1.178269
CUP 31.224134
CVE 110.189175
CZK 24.346105
DJF 209.924653
DKK 7.473862
DOP 70.261949
DZD 155.765946
EGP 61.767108
ERN 17.674038
ETB 184.070816
FJD 2.591952
FKP 0.875555
GBP 0.868914
GEL 3.163631
GGP 0.875555
GHS 13.026036
GIP 0.875555
GMD 86.603583
GNF 10343.882038
GTQ 9.012798
GYD 246.642371
HKD 9.234785
HNL 31.311586
HRK 7.534562
HTG 154.434384
HUF 363.672331
IDR 20188.228727
ILS 3.545995
IMP 0.875555
INR 109.820875
IQD 1544.350389
IRR 1550749.543803
ISK 143.819831
JEP 0.875555
JMD 186.152692
JOD 0.835438
JPY 187.40136
KES 152.491827
KGS 103.039883
KHR 4729.765365
KMF 492.516633
KPW 1060.411664
KRW 1736.175207
KWD 0.363944
KYD 0.982432
KZT 560.109324
LAK 25902.395554
LBP 105568.151082
LKR 371.997174
LRD 217.320455
LSL 19.30448
LTL 3.479122
LVL 0.712723
LYD 7.467829
MAD 10.904589
MDL 20.188279
MGA 4874.666269
MKD 61.65176
MMK 2474.219956
MNT 4212.979131
MOP 9.512076
MRU 46.848762
MUR 54.542446
MVR 18.216395
MWK 2044.201993
MXN 20.346176
MYR 4.651213
MZN 75.356188
NAD 19.30448
NGN 1593.314628
NIO 43.381252
NOK 11.139369
NPR 175.551942
NZD 1.998083
OMR 0.452972
PAB 1.178904
PEN 3.975998
PGK 5.186431
PHP 70.681419
PKR 328.816026
PLN 4.240426
PYG 7542.777562
QAR 4.297743
RON 5.090829
RSD 117.42604
RUB 88.810545
RWF 1726.419321
SAR 4.421028
SBD 9.483311
SCR 16.628037
SDG 708.139976
SEK 10.833828
SGD 1.498519
SHP 0.879697
SLE 29.044058
SLL 24707.71136
SOS 673.739237
SRD 44.102162
STD 24387.793413
STN 24.483152
SVC 10.314989
SYP 130.353335
SZL 19.298802
THB 37.740006
TJS 11.16396
TMT 4.129834
TND 3.423044
TOP 2.83699
TRY 52.713999
TTD 8.010556
TWD 37.256807
TZS 3070.831069
UAH 51.296119
UGX 4374.027212
USD 1.178269
UYU 47.437357
UZS 14317.269332
VES 562.068399
VND 31027.362703
VUV 140.607701
WST 3.251244
XAF 655.508705
XAG 0.01474
XAU 0.000244
XCD 3.184331
XCG 2.124656
XDR 0.815242
XOF 655.503145
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.046677
ZAR 19.27743
ZMK 10605.830032
ZMW 22.54539
ZWL 379.4022
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • BCC

    0.1700

    81.72

    +0.21%

  • CMSC

    0.1500

    22.64

    +0.66%

  • CMSD

    0.1700

    22.83

    +0.74%

  • BCE

    0.3500

    23.85

    +1.47%

  • GSK

    0.2400

    59.18

    +0.41%

  • BP

    -0.2700

    46.17

    -0.58%

  • NGG

    0.0000

    88.95

    0%

  • RIO

    -0.3300

    98.87

    -0.33%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    12.92

    0%

  • BTI

    -1.1800

    57.51

    -2.05%

  • RELX

    0.4600

    34.71

    +1.33%

  • RYCEF

    0.5900

    17.79

    +3.32%

  • VOD

    -0.0300

    15.62

    -0.19%

  • AZN

    2.1400

    204.38

    +1.05%

Indonesia coal plant closure U-turn sows energy transition doubts
Indonesia coal plant closure U-turn sows energy transition doubts / Photo: BAY ISMOYO - AFP

Indonesia coal plant closure U-turn sows energy transition doubts

Indonesian villager Supriyanto is visibly frustrated as he discusses the sprawling coal power plant emitting white plumes of smoke over his small fishing community.

Text size:

The Cirebon-1 plant was supposed to be in its final years, with its closure set for early 2035, as part of Indonesia's plans to wean itself from polluting coal with international support.

But a reversal last year cast fresh doubts on Jakarta's energy transition plans and dashed the hopes of locals who blame the plant for environmental and health problems.

Supriyanto, 32, is a green mussel trader and once bought from local fishermen who harvested the shellfish offshore.

They say the mussels have disappeared because of the plant's wastewater.

"There should be goods (green mussels) from our own village, now there aren't," Supriyanto, who like many Indonesians goes by one name, told AFP.

"Why does it (Cirebon-1) have to be here?"

Sarjum, 46, who lives in another village in the Cirebon area, said the plant has also affected his seafood trade and forced him to look for other work.

"The power plant discharged hot water. So the fish don't come," the father-of-three told AFP.

The consortium that owns Cirebon Power said it follows government regulations and wastewater is expelled "in a clear, pure condition, at the same temperature as the seawater".

The 660-megawatt (MW) Cirebon-1 coal plant began operating in 2012 with a 30-year contract. A second 1,000 MW facility started operation in 2023.

Cirebon-1 was picked for early retirement as a flagship project of a $20-billion international deal to help Indonesia phase out coal.

The 2022 Just Energy Transition Partnership (JETP) was supposed to channel funding from rich nations to help emerging economies green their grids.

But critics say there has been little progress.

Funding has grown to $21.8 billion, but only around $3.4 billion of that has been made available, Indonesia's government said earlier this month.

Last year, Washington withdrew altogether, with Germany stepping up to co-lead with Japan.

But the framework is in "deadlock", Center of Economic and Law Studies executive director Bhima Yudhistira Adhinegara said.

That is partly because several partners have their own energy transition schemes, like Japan's Asia Zero Emission Community.

"It means that each country is not placing their priority on the JETP itself," he told AFP, suggesting the deal should be "reformulated" with greater emphasis on local communities.

- 'Mixed signal' -

In 2024, Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto committed to phasing out fossil fuel power plants over the next 15 years.

But in December, the government said it would keep Cirebon-1 open, citing its long potential lifespan and "supercritical" technology, which burns coal more efficiently than older plants.

It said it would seek older and less efficient plants to close instead.

The government likely feared rising electricity prices because funding for replacement capacity remains uncertain, said Fabby Tumiwa, executive director of the Institute for Essential Services Reform (IESR) think-tank.

"The funds to build infrastructure to replace the coal plant are not all available now," he told AFP.

The move sent a "mixed signal" on the government's commitment, said Dinita Setyawati, Asia energy analyst at energy think-tank Ember.

It also highlights the need for funding to build "cleaner, alternative power plants to satisfy the energy needs", she said.

That might be better achieved with a "market-led energy transition", including deregulation of electricity distribution and perhaps subsidies, Dinita added.

Indonesia was the second country to sign a JETP after South Africa with the framework later applied in both Vietnam and Senegal.

There have been persistent criticisms, however, that the funding is difficult to access or offered as market-rate loans that risk creating debt traps.

Coal generates nearly 70 percent of Indonesia's electricity with state power firm PLN projecting 16.6 gigawatts in new coal and gas power capacity by 2034, according to a Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA) study.

Captive coal plants supplying industrial sites will add 31 GW more, CREA said.

- Health problems -

Around Cirebon-1, many residents describe increased respiratory problems since operations began, and a CREA study linked air pollutant emissions from the plant to over 400 deaths annually.

The plant's owner insists it adheres to required emission thresholds, but the government's closure U-turn has left some locals disheartened.

"We no longer believe what the government says," said local activist Mohammad Aan Anwaruddin, who has lobbied for its closure.

Plans to close Cirebon-1 have stirred up mixed emotions, especially for those employed at the facility.

"I'm not a hypocrite. I'm the breadwinner, earning my living there for my wife and children," Sopian Suputra, who works as a security guard at the plant, said.

Sarjum said he will continue to campaign for the plant's closure, fearing for his children and grandchildren's health.

"I think its killing Cirebon people slowly."

H.Sasidharan--DT