Indonesia’s dirty coal habit is proving hard to break

Posted By : Telegraf
13 Min Read

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JAKARTA – In setting an original target of 2070 for net-zero carbon emissions, President Joko Widodo’s government has made it clear to the angst of environmentalists that at least for now coal remains the necessary way of the future in powering Indonesia towards a place in the global industrial supply chain.

Despite a renewedcampaign by the Joe Biden administration and the European Union to tackle climate change, there is still 6,000-8,000-megawatts of coal-fired power generation either under construction or in the final planning stages across the archipelago.

Analysts estimate that coal won’t reach peak usage until 2035, a period during which Indonesia hopes to become the world’s fourth-biggest economy despite the setback caused by the Covid-19 pandemic that saw growth slide by minus-1.2% last year.

Domestic consumption still dominates the economy. But what is expected to drive further post-pandemic growth is Widodo’s single-minded effort to become a major cog in the global lithium battery-electric car industry and other economic benefits those industries are expected to bring.   

Former Indonesia ambassador to Washington Dino Djalal says Widodo was made to feel uncomfortable at last April’s virtual global climate change conference when his 2070 zero-emissions target turned out to be 20 years behind most other countries.

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