Indonesia could create close to 100,000 green jobs in coal producing regions with clean power expansion | Ember

Indonesia could create close to 100,000 green jobs in coal producing regions with clean power expansion

14 Aug 2024

This report analyses Indonesia’s State Electricity Company (PLN) Electricity Supply Business Plan (RUPTL) 2021-2030 and the Just Energy Transition Partnership (JETP) Comprehensive Investment and Policy Plan (CIPP). It also explores strategies for incorporating a just transition into energy plans at the provincial level.

Since the introduction of the National Energy Policy (NEP) in 2014, fossil fuels have grown to account for 81% of Indonesia’s electricity. The use of fossil fuels, particularly coal, has risen significantly in the past decade. From 2013 to 2023, fossil fuel generation increased by 50%, leading to a rise in power sector emissions by 86 million tonnes of CO2 (MtCO2).

This year, the country is set to launch a new NEP aimed at improving energy security and promoting energy transition with goals to peak emissions by 2035 and achieve net zero by 2060. However, the renewable energy target is expected to be reduced from 23% to between 17-19% by 2025.

Rapid expansion of renewables in coal-producing regions could reduce emissions, attract investment and create jobs

The analysis indicates that Indonesia’s on-grid electricity demand is expected to increase by approximately 4.7% annually, with generation likely to surpass demand by 42 TWh by 2030. This suggests that Indonesia should reconsider building new coal power plants to avoid the high risk of stranded assets.

Additionally, renewable energy projects could transform coal-producing regions such as East Kalimantan, South Kalimantan and South Sumatra. These three provinces emit around 30 MtCO2e from coal mine methane and coal-fired power plants.

Under the current RUPTL, 21 GW of renewables will be added by 2030, with an additional 36 GW from JETP CIPP targets. Allocating renewables projects to coal-producing regions could create 50,000 jobs and attract $4.3 billion USD in investment.

Expanding solar projects and cancelling new coal capacities could create additional 46,000 jobs and more than double the investment. Overall, this could reduce emissions by 18 MtCO2e, attract over $9.4 billion USD investment and create close to 100,000 high-skilled jobs.

Indonesia’s energy transition can be more equitable by repurposing coal projects into sustainable uses and focusing on renewable projects in impacted regions.

Energy transition provides an opportunity to transform the economy of Indonesia’s coal-producing regions and avoid coal-related emissions in the regions. Incorporating JETP targets into national and subnational policies will be the first step in realising this potential.

For developing countries, like Indonesia, energy transition should serve and support the imperative of the overall economic development agenda. Partnership and cooperation on an equal footing basis is key. All entities, including developed countries and development finance institutions, need to go beyond business-as-usual practices, especially in the design of financing structures and derisking instruments.

Edo Mahendra, Dphil
Head of Indonesia Energy Transition Implementation Joint Office (Rumah PATEN)

The use of solar power (PLTS) can be the backbone of energy transition, not only in terms of the energy mix, but also the domino effect it creates, including increasing employment in the green job sector. In addition, if demand grows, the solar industry will also grow, and this is what gives Indonesia its strength.

Mada Ayu Habsari
Chairperson of the Indonesian Solar Energy Association (AESI)

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Ember is an independent energy think tank that aims to accelerate the clean energy transition with data and policy. It creates targeted data insights to advance policies that urgently shift the world to a clean, electrified energy future.

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