From Asia Times Online:

Indonesia gets into hot water
By Andrew Symon 

DARJAT, West Java - In the shadow of steep volcanic mountains, Indonesia is
seeking to develop a cleaner future for its energy industry. Pressurized
steam from a score or more of wells is piped to power generation plants a
few kilometers away, feeding into the country's main Java-Bali power grid.
There are no coal storage yards, no power plant smokestacks to mar the area
s beauty or sully with soot the vegetable gardens that thrive in the rich
volcanic soil. 

Indonesia appears ready to tap geothermal energy resources estimated by some
industry analysts and experts to be the world's largest. New
investor-friendly regulations, the growing cost  competitiveness of
geothermal energy compared with oil, gas and coal, and improved financial
incentives are persuading foreign investors to pour funds into developing
the environmentally friendly fuel resource. 

Geothermal generation is essentially a matter of driving turbines using
steam from boiling water held under pressure in underground reservoirs. Much
of Indonesia sits on an area of active volcanoes, popularly known as the 
Pacific Rim of Fire'', and some 251 locations across the archipelago have
been identified as potentially viable sites for geothermal power production.


Executives at US oil-and-gas giant Chevron, which operates two geothermal
power plants at Darajat and Salak, West Java province, with a combined
capacity of 581 megawatts (MW), say they hope to double the size of their
geothermal business in Indonesia by 2020. Electricity generated by the
existing plants is sold to state power utility Perusahaan Listrik Negara
(PLN), while they also supply geothermal steam to a 55 MW unit at Darajat
run by Pertamina, the Indonesian state petroleum company. 

"Geothermal is very clean energy and its economics can make sense. This is a
terrific business for us," said Steve Green, managing director of Chevron's
IndoAsia business unit, in an interview with Asia Times Online. 

Indonesia has geothermal resources sufficient for 27,000 MW of power
capacity, or the largest store of geothermal resources identified anywhere
in the world, say government geologists and engineers. Actual proven,
probable and possible reserves are about half that, according to government
figures. Elsewhere in Southeast Asia, the Philippines has 2,000 MW of
installed geothermal capacity, the second-largest in the world after the US,
which has about 2,500 MW of capacity. 

Twenty years after Indonesia's first geothermal plant came on-line, the
country has only about 1,000 MW of capacity installed. Yet of all the
non-conventional or alternative energy sources, geothermal arguably is the
one that could make a real dent in meeting the country's growing demand for
power. Indonesia is finding it ever harder to keep pace with surging demand,
witnessed in the increasingly frequent brown and black outs across the
country. 

The government aims to install 8,000 MW of new geothermal power plants by
2026, part of its goal to have by then 90,000 MW of new installed power from
all sources including nuclear, according to the ministry of energy and
mineral resource. At present the country has 30,000 MW of installed power
generating capacity. 

Other non-conventional energy sources such as solar, biomass and wind are
unlikely to offer power on a large scale, although they could be important
in meeting lower levels of demand in rural areas that without power or that
currently use expensive small diesel systems. 

Indonesia looks set to pick up the pace in harnessing its geothermal
potential after the setbacks of the 1997-98 economic collapse and subsequent
fall of the Suharto regime. Prior to that, the government had awarded 11
development contracts for geothermal power plants, mostly to foreign private
operators. The government subsequently suspended seven of these projects and
plans for nine private fossil-fuel power plants on the advice of the World
Bank and International Monetary Fund. Had those contracts been honored, a
total of 3,417 MW of new geothermal capacity would have been brought
on-stream between 1998 and 2002. 

Over the intervening years, the government and PLN have re-negotiated most
of the contracts. Chevron inherited the geothermal operations developed by
fellow US energy giant Unocal upon Chevron's takeover of the company in 2005
 Its recent US$110 million power plant extension at Darajat came on-line in
July 2007. 

Another geothermal project pointing to new confidence in the sector is the
110 MW expansion of the Wayang Windu geothermal power plant, close to
Darajat. The project, operated by Indonesia's Star Energy in conjunction
with Ashmore, a UK-based investment management company, is backed by a $298
million financial package secured last May and underwritten by Standard
Chartered Bank. Dung Ho, the bank's Singapore-based head of power for Asia,
said the financing shows that Indonesian geothermal projects are now
attractive to foreign and local investors and banks. 

Other factors said to be sparking investor interest is the recovery of PLN
since the financial crisis of a decade ago and its renewed ability to meet
contracted payments. Chevron, for one, says PLN now pays its invoices well
on time. For PLN, geothermal is attractive because the cost of power is not
linked directly to global oil, gas and coal prices, all of which have
recently spiked sharply. 
Carbon credits 
Boosting interest in geothermal energy is the possibility that projects will
earn carbon dioxide credits under the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) of
the United Nations Kyoto Accord on climate change. Projects that show that
they avoid carbon dioxide emissions that would have been generated by
similar fossil fuel-run plants gain credits that can be sold into carbon
markets or used by companies to offset their own carbon dioxide emissions. 

Indonesia as a developing country does not face mandatory targets under the
Kyoto Accord but does come under the CDM program. Geothermal power
facilities of 360 MW capacity are estimated to emit 2.6 million tonnes less
carbon dioxide per year than a coal-fired plant of the same capacity.
Chevron's Darajat plant, for example, will gain for the company 650,000
tonnes of carbon emission credits per year. 

Legal and regulatory uncertainties still hang over the sector. A 2003 law
for geothermal investments is unclear on the responsibility local
governments will have in the administration and allocation of new areas of
geothermal exploration and development. 

Investors such as Chevron hope that new regulations defining
responsibilities between local authorities, which stand to gain royalties
when geothermal resources are tapped in their areas, and the central
government will be in place this year. Under the old law, the rights to the
resources were held exclusively by Pertamina. 

Under that regime, private companies could develop geothermal resources
under contract to Pertamina then sell the steam-produced energy to another
company or companies that operated power plants, which in turn could sell
the power to PLN. Pertamina still directly operates some geothermal sites
and sells their power-producing steam directly to PLN-operated plants. 

Also under the new 2003 law, Pertamina no longer manages geothermal
resources for the state but continues to play a significant role in the
sector because it holds rights to geothermal contract areas and plants
established under the old law. Existing geothermal developments, including
Chevron's Darajat and Star Energy's Wayang Windu extensions, are operated
under leases signed while the old law was in force and no new greenfield
areas have been awarded since the 1990s. 

There are also hard-to-hedge geological risks. Geothermal plants must be
built near to the geothermal resources. The main power demand center, the
heavily populated and industrialized island of Java, is an area endowed with
the greatest geothermal potential after Sumatra Island. Yet the uncertainty
of whether a geothermal field will provide sufficient steam over a
long-enough period to recoup initial investments is a major risk. As such,
geological exploration must be extensive and on-going so as to ensure backup
wells, in case the developed operating wells lose pressure and heat. 

Areas that do have geothermal potential generally entail small geographical
areas because of the nature of the sub-surface geology. Chevron's Darajat
field covers an area of just 3,000 hectares. As a result, geothermal power
plant units are usually of modest size - of 100 MW or less - and are
commonly developed in modules over time as more geothermal resources are
identified. 
On the other hand, this incremental approach and the smaller size of plants
compared with traditional coal- or gas-fired generation plants can make for
more digestible financing demands on developing economies. So long as global
oil prices hover at around US$125 a barrel, the drawbacks of geothermal
projects look to be outweighed by the attractions. 

Andrew Symon is a Singapore-based analyst and writer specializing in energy and 
natural resources. He can be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED] 

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