Barriers to Renewable Energy Investment in the Indonesian Power Sector
Abstract
Indonesia has set ambitious targets of increasing the share of
renewable energy in electricity supply and reducing greenhouse
gas emissions relative to a baseline. But despite abundant
renewable energy resources and policies to promote renewable
energy, the country has experienced only slow additions in
renewable electricity supply. Future expansions in generation
capacity are planned to rely heavily on coal-based power supply.
This thesis examines the barriers to renewable energy in
Indonesia, provides a detailed case study on the effectiveness of
specific renewable energy policy instruments in a developing
economy context and applies mean variance portfolio (MVP) theory
to analyse power supply outcomes.
This thesis provides a historical analysis of the effectiveness
of policies to incentivise renewable energy supply in the
Indonesian electricity sector. Empirical analysis of supply
trends covers the period 1990–2015, while perceptions of the
effectiveness of regulatory incentives are based on stakeholder
interviews conducted in 2011 and 2012. The main finding is that a
combination of regulatory uncertainty in the Indonesian power
sector, financial weakness of the national electricity utility
Perusahaan Listrik Negara (PLN) and ineffective feed-in tariffs
have had a dampening effect on renewable energy investment. In
the absence of credible, mandatory renewable energy targets for
PLN, the utility has prioritised coal and gas over renewables. An
important reason being that renewable power projects carry higher
upfront investment costs and, until now, have been more expensive
per unit of power output. Feed-in tariffs have been rendered
ineffective as they were set at levels too low to act as premium
prices, with PLN and independent power producers locked into
lengthy negotiations over contracts, thus slowing project
implementation.
Taking the long view, the thesis uses MVP theory to analyse the
risk-mitigation potential of renewables in PLN’s future
electricity supply mix. This analysis identifies the cost risk
trade-off of various electricity mix scenarios and provides a
quantitative measure to assess the potential benefits from
diversifying energy production.
The findings are that the average system costs for various future
technologies are in a narrow range, with renewables cheaper than
conventional generation technologies, especially when carbon
costs are included. The risk of investing in the power sector,
defined as cost risk and measured by the standard deviation of
past cost streams, differs significantly across generation
technologies and is lower for renewables. Energy portfolios
containing a large share of renewables combined with energy
efficiency measures are now preferable in cost and risk terms,
although at higher discount rates the cost advantage is less
pronounced.
This thesis concludes that policy reforms need to focus on
continuing to move towards cost-reflective tariffs to improve
PLN’s financial footing. Combined with continued declining
costs of renewables, feed-in tariffs could become more effective
when set at levels that truly act as premium prices. They could
be combined with quantitative instruments such as renewable
portfolio standards to help overcome institutional bias against
renewables within PLN, especially in a period of transiting
towards a cost-effective tariff system and phasing out of
subsidies.
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