http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2428&Itemid=226

Geothermal Energy and Indonesia

Written by Terry Lacey    
Wednesday, 28 April 2010
 Iceland comes to Bali to show the way 

When President Olafur Ragnar Grimsson of Iceland came to open the 2010 World 
Geothermal Congress on April 226 in Bali with Indonesian President Susilo 
Bambang Yudhoyono it was as if the fiery spirit of geothermal energy was angry 
with the human race.

The Icelandic volcano Eyjafjallajokull had thrown up huge clouds of ash, 
bringing Western European air traffic to a halt for days. But Grimsson came 
from his small island state near the Arctic circle with its population of 
318,000 to inspire President Yudhoyono with his population of 230 million that 
Indonesia, with 40 percent of world geothermal energy resources, could succeed 
in developing clean sustainable geothermal energy.

The World Geothermal Congress 2010 hopefully marks a turning point for an 
industry which just reached global electrical production capacity of 10 GWe - 
or 10,000 megawatts (MW) - although Indonesia alone probably needs an extra 5 
GWe every year to keep up with demand.

The geothermal industry is growing up, with an estimated resource capacity of 
28,000 MW in Indonesia. Indonesia plans to develop 4,000 MW of geothermal 
energy as part of its second 10,000 MW accelerated electricity development 
program between 2010 and 2015 and to develop 9,500 MW of geothermal energy by 
2025. Yet the country has only developed 1,200 MW so far and is taking a gamble 
that it can rapidly mobilize the financial and human capacity needed. The 
country needs an estimated US$12 billion to build 4,000 MW urgently. One 
foreign expert estimated it needs 50 to 60 full-time trained specialist 
professionals to build each GWe of capacity. But Indonesia only has 20 percent 
of this capacity right now. 

The 2,500 Geothermal Congress participants in Bali looked like a cross-section 
of a green technology movement in transition. The crowd ranged from bearded 
latter-day hippie geo-technology freaks, to green idealists to bright young 
professionals and earnest bureaucrats from countries seeking to learn how to 
regulate a new energy business. Not to mention a growing number of harder-nosed 
blue-suited business leaders learning how to make money out of an industry with 
high front-end costs and big exploration risks.

Yet the geothermal congress still looked and sounded like a missionary movement 
seeking to finance the unfinanceable, bank on the unbankable, insure the 
uninsurable, and perhaps negotiate the non-negotiable with governments and 
institutions, whilst anxious that wind, solar and other renewables may overtake 
it before its search for the Holy Grail of exponential growth could be 
successful.

And looming over the entire green movement is the relentless onward march of a 
revived carbon-free nuclear power industry, providing the only technology that 
can plug the gap on the high-volume energy demands of the masses in Asia who 
are not yet into energy efficiency, while gobbling up maybe 80 percent of 
global energy research and development budgets, with its capacity to generate 
gynormous Gigs of power, but at what true cost in resources and long term waste 
management? 

Energy statistics may mean that nuclear energy will win by a long lead, but 
geothermal can take its place as a medium-sized player on the global stage and 
maybe give the world 100 GWe in the next 90 years, having taken the last 100 to 
generate 10. 

Meanwhile Indonesia is both dream and nightmare, and the main battleground on 
which the battle for global geothermal credibility must be fought and won. Its 
track record for progressing from laws to regulations to enforcement is poor. 
Its insufficiently adapted regulatory frameworks and hybrid deconcentrated 
decentralization are a challenge for decision-making. 

The enthusiasm and commitment of President Yudhoyono, his top ministers and 
officials will hopefully counterbalance opposition, inertia and corruption. 
Problems of lack of infrastructure and capacity must be resolved. A cultural 
compromise is needed in support of the Independent Power Producer model, 
satisfying both the nationalist and globalizing camps at home as well as 
foreign investors. 

In addition geothermal energy must serve the poor as well as the rich, the 
rural as well as the urban and small communities and interests as well as big 
ones, with micro and medium-sized power as well as larger-scale. Such thinking 
is almost unheard of in Indonesia but means it would be possible to help 
villages with their own geothermal power. 

But some of the bright young professionals in Bali, and social visionaries, 
knew what to do and the expertise from Iceland, Germany, other EU countries and 
the USA needs to reach rural Indonesia, East Africa and other places where 
social balance is essential and large-scale development will not be possible 
given resources or appropriate to needs.

Resolve these issues and the geothermal lobby will help transform Indonesia 
into a truly modern and great economy, the seventh or eighth largest in the 
world. So President Grimsson was not selling hot air. If his little country 
could do so much with geothermal energy with so little, then Indonesia must 
learn from Iceland that size is not everything. And that it's not what you do, 
but the way that you do it. 

Terry Lacey is a development economist who writes from Jakarta.

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