TY - JOUR
T1 - Implication of the Paris agreement target on Indonesia electricity sector transition to 2050 using TIMES model
AU - Reyseliani, Nadhilah
AU - Hidayatno, Akhmad
AU - Purwanto, Widodo Wahyu
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors are grateful to DRPM UI for supporting this work financially under the Hibah Publikasi Terindeks International (PUTI) Q1 Universitas Indonesia , Contract Number: NKB-4015/UN2 . RST/HKP.05.00/2020 . N.R. gratefully acknowledges the Master and Doctoral Degree Scholarship program (PMDSU) awarded by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Research, and Technology the Republic of Indonesia , Contract Number: NKB-351/UN2.RST/HKP.05.00/2021 .
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2022/10
Y1 - 2022/10
N2 - This study examines the transition of Indonesia's electricity system 2020–2050 to achieve Paris Agreement target using TIMES model. Three scenarios, including Reference Case, Current Policy, and Paris Agreement are reviewed. Reference case system will be 77% dominated by unabated coal power plant, and Current Policy will only reduce its share by 10% in 2050. Furthermore, the emissions from these scenarios are still half of estimated electricity emission in NDC due to different demand level between the policy target and current level indicating the ambition gap. Achieving well below 2°C long-term target, 50% of RE and 40% of IGCC-CCS in electricity production are needed. There will be 48% increase in investment compare to reference case and constant electricity production to current level. Uncertainty of carbon budget will not shift the emission peak or penetration of solar PV utility-scale, but will greatly affect the deployment time, as soon as 2030 or as later as 2040, and capacity of IGCC-CCS and the presence of BECCS up to 2050. Reform of Indonesia's electricity system needs to be carried out because of changes in technology and investment directions, the need to accelerate technological readiness, coupled with the current condition of market structure and electricity prices.
AB - This study examines the transition of Indonesia's electricity system 2020–2050 to achieve Paris Agreement target using TIMES model. Three scenarios, including Reference Case, Current Policy, and Paris Agreement are reviewed. Reference case system will be 77% dominated by unabated coal power plant, and Current Policy will only reduce its share by 10% in 2050. Furthermore, the emissions from these scenarios are still half of estimated electricity emission in NDC due to different demand level between the policy target and current level indicating the ambition gap. Achieving well below 2°C long-term target, 50% of RE and 40% of IGCC-CCS in electricity production are needed. There will be 48% increase in investment compare to reference case and constant electricity production to current level. Uncertainty of carbon budget will not shift the emission peak or penetration of solar PV utility-scale, but will greatly affect the deployment time, as soon as 2030 or as later as 2040, and capacity of IGCC-CCS and the presence of BECCS up to 2050. Reform of Indonesia's electricity system needs to be carried out because of changes in technology and investment directions, the need to accelerate technological readiness, coupled with the current condition of market structure and electricity prices.
KW - Decarbonisation
KW - Electricity system planning
KW - Indonesia
KW - Net-zero emission
KW - Paris agreement
KW - Policy
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85135698007&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.enpol.2022.113184
DO - 10.1016/j.enpol.2022.113184
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85135698007
SN - 0301-4215
VL - 169
JO - Energy Policy
JF - Energy Policy
M1 - 113184
ER -