Asia is moving along a
dangerously unsustainable energy path that will result in environmental
disaster and a gaping divide in energy access between the rich and poor unless
the region dramatically changes course, says a new Asian Development Bank (ADB)
report.
"Asia could be
consuming more than half the world’s energy supply by 2035, and without radical
changes carbon dioxide emissions will double," said ADB chief economist
Changyong Rhee.
"Asia must both
contain rising demand and explore cleaner energy options, which will require
creativity and resolve, with policymakers having to grapple with politically
difficult issues like fuel subsidies and regional energy market
integration," Asia’s Energy Challenge, the special theme chapter in ADB’s
Asian Development Outlook 2013 (ADO 2013) stated, highlighting the complex
balancing act the region faces to deliver energy to all its citizens while
scaling back its reliance addiction on fossil fuels.
"If by 2035, Asia
merely expands energy access without fundamentally changing the way it
consumes," the report predicts the region’s oil consumption will double,
natural gas consumption will triple, and coal consumption will rise a whopping
81 per cent, with costly and devastating environmental impacts.
Asia’s limited
indigenous energy resources present an additional challenge. With only nine per
cent of proven global oil reserves, the region is currently on track to almost
triple oil imports by 2035, rendering it significantly more vulnerable to
external supply shocks.
In Asia, 1.8 billion
people in Asia still rely on wood and other traditional fuel as their primary
energy source. Since modern energy access is essential for their social and
economic advancement, Asia must find the political will and innovation to scrap
outdated policies and recalibrate its energy mix.
For one, policymakers
will need to replace general fuel subsidies that artificially lower the cost of
power and impose huge fiscal burdens with targeted subsidies for the poor.
The report suggests
eliminating wasteful subsidies worldwide would also lower CO2 emissions by 2.6
billion tonnes in 2035. Carefully designed support for renewable energy
technologies must be stepped up. Next generation wind, solar and biofuel
technologies, which are expected to be more cost competitive than current
options and do not compete with food crops, offer potential solutions.
Asia has great potential
in shale gas, with the China having the world’s largest endowment. But
technical uncertainties like leakage and water contamination must be addressed.
The Fukushima disaster powerfully underscored the risks of nuclear power, but a
phase out would see a sharp spike in fossil fuel use. A far greater focus on
green, energy efficient cities and transport systems, along with scaled up
research into clean energy, are equally critical.
Countries cannot meet
all their power requirements on their own, so Asia must accelerate cross-border
interconnection of power and gas grids to improve efficiency, cut costs, and
take advantage of surplus power, it said, adding, "With increased
cooperation, a pan-Asia energy market is achievable by 2030."
Ensuring the poor are
not left out will require policies to secure an adequate energy floor for low
income earners, and the development of effective off-grid power supply options
for remote communities. Narrowing the energy divide between richer and poorer
countries requires targeted international aid to build power infrastructure
which benefits the less well off.
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