Viet Nam's high growth means a greater
reliance on coal to meet its rising energy demand. More than USD400 million was
spent during the first quarter of this year on importing coal, newly-published
figures from the Viet Nam Industry and Trade Information Center (VITIC) reveal.
Volume increased 1.6 per cent year-on-year and price 90.6 per cent. Australia
remained the largest provider of imports, with nearly 1.3 million tons worth USD157.2
million (up 11.6 per cent and 136.8 per cent year-on-year), followed by
Indonesia with nearly 1.1 million tons worth USD77.2 million (up 127 per cent
and 260 per cent). Viet Nam also imported 555,568 tons of coal worth USD60
million from Russia, 232,890 tons worth USD52.5 million from China, and 53,385
tons worth USD3 million from Malaysia. Historically, Viet Nam has been
self-sufficient in coal but this has now changed. It is now transitioning from
exporting to importing energy. “Viet Nam imported nearly 10 million tons of
coal in 2016 and purchased 5 billion kWh of electricity from China in the peak
period,” Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade Hoang Quoc Vuong told a recent
energy conference. “While the amount of imported electricity from China is
declining, it still stands at around 1 billion kWh,” he added. “Viet Nam will
also need to import an estimated 17 million tons of coal, equivalent to 31 per
cent of demand, to generate electricity to 2020, with the amount to
subsequently head further upwards.” Coal-fired power, while having
environmental impacts, is still the necessary power source for Viet Nam to meet
its growth demand, Deputy Minister Vuong explained, adding that Viet Nam will
not sacrifice the environment for economic development. “In the time to come,
the supervision process and environmental standards applied on coal-fired power
plants will be stricter. Investors will also have to come up with eco-friendly
solutions for coal ash handling.” Last November, after years of mulling over
costs, feasibility, foreign cooperation, and safety issues, Viet Nam pulled
away from nuclear power. The two nuclear reactors still on the drawing board
would have added 40,000 MW to the national grid but the estimated price tag of USD27
billion was too high for a country with a public debt now touching 65 per cent
of GDP. A pressing need to expand its energy generation capacity without
burning a hole in the country’s State budget forced Viet Nam to turn to what it
already had: coal. The country’s annual power consumption is about 162 billion
kWh, according to estimates by Electricity of Viet Nam (EVN). It has some 20
coal-fired plants and plans to increase that number to 32 by 2020 and 51 by
2030. This means that, by 2020, the country’s coal plants will be producing 49
per cent of its electricity output by burning 63 million tons of coal. This
would then reach 129 million tons by the time it has all 51 plants in
operation. Its revised National Power Development Plan for 2011-2020 (PDP XII)
makes it clear that thermal power will be the mainstay of its energy mix. In
the opinion of Mr. Eric Sidgwick, Country Director of the Asian Development
Bank (ADB), energy sources need to be diversified, and the government needs to
reduce its reliance on coal and provide for renewable energy to be a
substitute. “As far as we understand, the Vietnamese Government is eager to
have more renewable energy, but the cost, while coming down, is still
relatively high,” he told VET. “The issue for Viet Nam is that because it is
growing so quickly, it will need to use and access more energy.” Last month,
Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc issued a long-awaited decision approving the
mechanism on the development of solar power projects, Decision No.11/2017,
introducing a tariff of USD0.0935 per kWh for the purchase of electricity from
grid-connected solar power plants. This is higher than the tariff applied to
onshore wind power projects of USD0.078 per kWh. Professor Tran Dinh Thien,
Director of the Viet Nam Institute of Economics “Energy waste stands at 50 per
cent in the cement industry, 35 per cent in ceramics, 30 per cent in textiles,
20 per cent in steel, and 50 per cent in agriculture.” Mr. Phan The Hung,
Deputy Director General of the General Department of Energy under the Ministry
of Industry and Trade “USD148 billion is needed to develop electricity sources
and transmission networks during the 2016-2030 period, including USD40 billion
during the 2016-2020 period and USD108 billion during the 2021-2030 period.” Mr.
Eric Sidgwick, Country Director of the Asian Development Bank (ADB) “It is not
just the total amount of energy that needs to be looked at, but making supply
more efficient.”
Vietnam
Economic Times – May 10 - http://vneconomictimes.com/article/vietnam-today/energy-an-ongoing-challenge
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