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ADB’s climate vision: No place for ‘dirty energy’

ADB will continue to help its developing member countries achieve their targets under the Paris Agreement on climate change. We will ensure that, as we meet our own climate finance targets, ADB’s lending portfolio has no place for ‘dirty energy’

Illustration: Ratna Sagar Shrestha/THT

Only weeks ago, the world’s leading climate scientists warned that 2 degrees Celsius of global warming would have even worse impacts than anticipated. The report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change called for a more rapid decarbonization of the global economy to limit warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius.

Greenhouse gas emissions will not drop quickly enough if global investment into clean energy is not doubled and all countries embrace renewable energy, especially in the Asia-Pacific, a region which has fast-growing emissions as well as greatest number of people acutely exposed to the harshest consequences of a changing climate.

Helping to make this happen is a responsibility that the Asian Development Bank (ADB) takes seriously. Our developing member countries are already taking steps to protect their communities by mainstreaming climate-smart policies and technologies into development planning.

Our commitment to supporting these efforts is demonstrated in our recently approved long-term Strategy 2030. In it, we undertake that 75 per cent of all ADB projects will support climate change mitigation and adaptation. Climate finance from ADB’s own resources will increase to $80 billion from 2019 through 2030.

Already, our focus on clean energy is having an impact. In line with our 2020 climate finance target of $3 billion in annual investments into clean energy, ADB approved just over $2 billion for 25 renewable energy and energy efficiency projects last year. This will deploy 1,557 megawatts of new renewable energy generation capacity, save 738 gigawatt-hours of electricity per year, and avoid 11.8 million metric tons of carbon dioxide (CO2)-equivalent per year of greenhouse gas emissions.

Innovative technologies are at the heart of our work on climate. We finance transmission and distribution projects incorporating smart grids and energy storage technologies that will give more people access to energy and help to integrate renewable energy into power systems. Advances including renewable energy-based microgrids with storage, waste-to-energy, geothermal, carbon capture and storage, and artificial intelligence are central to the region’s low-carbon growth prospects.

So too is the private sector, which can help pioneer these technologies. We help companies throughout Asia, including remote and vulnerable countries like Samoa, to develop solar and other clean energy sources they need to thrive.

ADB recently established a high-level technology fund to promote innovative projects. An electricity transmission infrastructure project in Pakistan will pilot battery storage near wind farms in Thatta district of Sindh province, helping the transmission company improve grid reliability and dispatch intermittent renewable energy. In Vietnam, we are financing, through two funds focused on clean energy, the construction of solar power panels that will float on the reservoir of an existing hydropower plant.

Still, there’s a lot of work to be done.

About 439 million people in developing Asia go without electricity. Most live in remote areas unreachable by power grids. To help, we are stepping up support for off-grid solutions such as a solar-based mini-grid with battery storage on Cobrador island in the Philippines, for which we provided technical and grant assistance. Such projects can provide 24-hour electricity supply for remote and rural areas and cut dependence on fossil fuels. What’s more, they can be widely replicated.

While we enable our developing member countries to transform their energy systems, we are supporting a transition in the interim by investing in new and efficient power plants based on natural gas, which emit 50 -60 per cent less CO2 compared to new coal plants.

In the past, there were instances when coal-fired power plants were the only economically viable way of addressing chronic power blackouts that disproportionately affected the poorest people in our developing member countries. The last such instance was five years ago in Pakistan, where we supported the Jamshoro supercritical coal-fired power plant which prior to our investment was running on highly-polluting heavy fuel oil.

Clean energy will power Asia’s future.

To promote this, ADB has integrated a shadow carbon price into its economic analysis of projects to reflect the negative externalities caused by greenhouse gas emissions.

By applying a shadow carbon price of $36.30 per ton of CO2 (to be increased by 2 per cent annually in real terms) to all projects, we encourage innovative projects with lower emissions and discourage more polluting ones. Given the increasingly competitive cost of renewable energy technologies, the growing risk of stranded fossil fuel assets, and the rising shadow carbon price, coal-based power plants will no longer be a viable option to meet the electricity demand of developing countries.

ADB will continue to help its developing member countries achieve their targets under the Paris Agreement on climate change. We will ensure that, as we meet our own climate finance targets, ADB’s lending portfolio has no place for “dirty energy”.

Zhai is chief of ADB’s Energy Sector Group

[October 29, 2018 / thehimalayantimes.com]   
 
 
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