Southeast Asia's Energy Transition Mechanisms (ETMs) Need to Evolve

29 Apr 2024
Southeast Asia's Energy Transition Mechanisms (ETMs) Need to Evolve
Authors: Peter du Pont and Sasina Tangphitthayawet
Authoring Organisation: ACE Partners - Asia Clean Energy Partners
Posted At: 03-2024

Peter du Pont, Co-Founder and Co-CEO, Asia Clean Energy Partners

Sasina Tangphitthayawet, Knowledge and Stakeholder Engagement Associate, Asia Clean Energy Partners

Each month, the SIPET Newsletter invites experts from Southeast Asia to share their work and thinking on important aspects of the unfolding Energy Transition. In this month’s issue, we highlight the critical role of Energy Transition Mechanisms (ETMs) in Southeast Asia's evolving energy landscape. The issue includes reports and perspectives on coal retirement and financing from CASE Indonesia, NewClimate Institute, and TransitionZero. See below the lists covering ETMs from different perspectives: 

- ‘Coal’s Endgame: Cost-Benefit Analysis (CBA) of Early Retirement Coal-Fired Power Plant (CFPP) versus CFPP with Carbon Capture and Storage’, by CASE Indonesia

Process, Not Product: Why Southeast Asia’s Energy Transition Mechanisms need time to evolve, by TransitionZero

- ‘Financing Coal Phase-Out: Public Development Bank’s Role in the Early Retirement of Coal Plant’, and ‘Caution on Co-Firing, Retrofitting, and Carbon Credits for Retirement: Considerations for Public Development banks on Coal Phase-Out Risks', by Newclimate Institute

We are very impressed by a highly informative blog written by Melissa Brown, a longtime fixture in the financing of Asian power markets and a Consultant Analyst at TransitionZero. Her blog highlights the evolution of ETMs and analyzes ways that modifying the capital structure of an ETM can more effectively attract the investment needed to finance early retirement of coal-fired power plants and in clean energy.  We provide a brief summary here, and highly recommend that interested professionals read the blog in full.

2024 is an Important Year for ETMs

The year 2024 will be crucial for understanding how ETMs can evolve in different Southeast Asian markets. These mechanisms, which facilitate the early retirement of coal assets, are becoming increasingly vital as they offer flexibility to align policies and enable bankable deals in the energy sector.

Brown’s analysis emphasizes how ETMs can transform a country's emission trajectory, citing examples like the ACEN ETM in the Philippines in 2022—one of the first of its kind. This deal has had significant influenced on subsequent initiatives. The pending refinancing of Cirebon I ETM in Indonesia, which is expected during the first half of 2024 is being shaped significantly by its technical and financial support from ADB and the International Partners Group (IPG), and will be an important milestone in Indonesia’s efforts to restructure its power sector, and will be a valuable reference point for the region going forward.

The importance of new financing tools like transition credits, introduced by institutions such as the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), underscores the need for ETMs to attract capital to support the transition away from high-carbon assets.

Some Key Points:

- ETM Flexibility: ETMs play a critical role in enabling the early retirement of coal plants, a crucial step in reducing emissions and accelerating the shift towards cleaner energy sources. They offer the flexibility needed to finance these retirements, foster policy alignment, and enable feasible deals within the energy sector.

- Evolution of Deals in the Market: The year 2024 represents an important juncture for ETMs in Southeast Asia. The earlier ACEN ETM deal in 2022 set a benchmark for future transactions. The pending Cirebon I ETM deal in Indonesia will be an important reference point, and it demonstrates the tangible impact that ambitious government targets can have on stimulating finance to restructure Indonesia’s power sector.  

- Financial Innovation: The blog highlights the pros and cons (mostly pros) of a new “portfolio approach” to refinancing early plant retirements, which can reduce transaction costs and allow fleet-wide retirement efforts. The blog reviews and compares three different refinancing models (Acquisition Model, Synthetic Model, and Portfolio Model) in detail.

- Market Acceptance: Individual ETM transactions can catalyze broader market acceptance and drive policy innovation, addressing the evolving needs of the energy transition. Comprehensive frameworks and local market insights are crucial for attracting investment towards retiring coal assets and developing renewable energy sources.

- Size of the Prize! TransitionZero’s analysis for Indonesia reveals that through 2060, intentional refinancing to achieve early coal retirement can avoid 1.3 gigatonnes of CO2 emissions. Numbers like this demonstrate the feasibility of transitioning away from coal and can pave the way for broader market acceptance and policy innovation.

Why ETM Matters to Southeast Asia's Energy Transition:

ETMs offer a strategic pathway to accelerate coal plant retirements and stimulate investments in renewables within a region characterized by a young coal fleet and evolving policies. They are indispensable for achieving ambitious emission reduction goals in Southeast Asia. We highly recommend reading this informative blog by Melissa Brown of Transition Zero and sharing it widely across your networks.

For More Information:

Read the blog by Melissa Brown for TransitionZero: Here.

Further information : Click here