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New Power Plant, New Air Pollution

22 April 2016   14:32 Diperbarui: 22 April 2016   14:40 37
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President of Indonesia has launched a program designed to provide an additional 35 GW of power capacity by 2019 to cope with electricity shortages, which hit large amount of the population, and to reduced the country's dependence on fossil fuels. Electricity demand growth in 2015-2019 is predicted to reach 8.7%/year, on average.

The program is supported by tailor-made regulations and includes the development of around 210 power plant projects across the country: 10 GW of project will be directly managed by the State-owned power company PT PLN (35 projects), while private companies are invited to participate in 25 GW of projects (74 projects). 59 projects will take place in Sumatra state, 34 in Java, 49 in Sulawesi, 34 in Kalimantan and 34 in eastern Indonesia.

Out of the 35 GW planned, coal-fired power plants will represent 20 GW, gas-fired project 13 GW and renewable energy sources 3.7 GW, split in 2.4 GW of hydropower, 1.2 GW of geothermal energy and 120 MW of wind electricity capacity. The Government plans that the construction of the 20 GW of coal-fired power capacity should increase the need of 80-90 Mt/year of coal, of which 40% are expected to be supplied internally. The projects are estimated to cost about IRup1,120bn (US$88bn).  

The Indonesian government’s plan to build 117 new coal-fired power plants could cause tens of thousands of premature deaths, according to a new analysis. Harvard University researchers say pollution from those coal power plants in the pipeline will put 21,200 lives at risk — and that’s on top of the 6,500 premature deaths caused in the country by the existing 42 coal plants. Add to that the 600 people killed outside the country by Indonesian coal pollution and it’s a grand total of 28,300 coal-fired deaths a year.

Indonesia’s Energy Ministry is also considering how to fulfill a new ambitious plan to add 35GW of new power capacity by 2019. If they opt for coal – as looks to be the case – Havard will probably have to revise up that 28,000 premature deaths figure. The thing that’s killing them all is the pollution particulate PM2.5 which is so small it can get into the lungs and bloodstream and cause all kinds of cardiovascular and respiratory diseases. PM2.5 is made up of mix of pollutants like nitrogen oxide (NOx) and sulphur dioxide (SO2) which coal-fired power plants emit.

The human cost of coal

The Harvard research is basis of a Greenpeace report called The Human Cost of Coal Power, in which a detailed breakdown of the projected deaths is provided.

With all those currently under construction coal plants, the number dying inside Indonesia and out from heart disease, lung cancer, and strokes will triple, with obstructive pulmonary disease claiming nearly four time as many lives.

Acute respiratory infections are expected to kill around 400 young children a year. And Indonesia is planning on massively increasing its coal capacity further, though the report hasn’t got any concrete figures on this latest expansion. President Jokowi is planning for 35GW of new power plants by 2019, 22 of which will probably be coal-fired (62%).

Coal accounts for around 50% of Indonesia’s energy-related SO2 emissions, 30% of PM10 emissions, and 28% of NOx emissions, according to 2008 data. Those figures are probably much higher now since coal use doubled from 2008 to 2014, and its share in the energy mix increased from 24% to 35%. And, as the graph above illustrates, Indonesia has incredibly lax air pollution standards — a very weak 150μg/m3 daily ceiling for PM10 and no limit at all for PM2.5.

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