Japan, China, and South Korea violate Paris agreement by funding coal in Indonesia
sexta-feira, julho 21, 2017
The three nations – all members of the Paris climate agreement – are
involved with 18 of 22 coal power deals made in Indonesia since 2010,
according to a report from Market Forces, an Australia-based
environmental finance organization.
Bangkok—Japan, China, and
South Korea are bankrolling environmentally destructive coal-fired power
plants in Indonesia despite their pledges to reduce climate-changing
emissions under the Paris climate deal, analysts told the Thomson
Reuters Foundation.
Australia-based
environmental finance organization Market Forces said it analyzed 22
coal power deals in Indonesia since January 2010 and found state-run
financiers for the three nations were involved in 18 of them.
In
all, foreign banks, both commercial and state-owned, are providing 98
percent of the debt finance for the projects, amounting to $16.7
billion.
Indonesian
banks provided just 2 percent of the financial resources for the
projects, according to the Market Forces analysis published this week.
Japan,
China, and South Korea "are on board with the Paris climate change
agreement. They make all the right noises politically," Julien Vincent,
executive director of Market Forces, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation
in a phone interview.
But "these are the same governments underwriting new coal development elsewhere," he said, calling the actions "egregious."
The
landmark 2015 Paris Agreement, which came into force in November, seeks
to limit the rise in average world temperatures to well below 2 degrees
Celsius above preindustrial times.
Coal is
the most polluting of the major fossil fuels and scientists say its use
must be rapidly phased out to give the world a chance of meeting its
goals to curb climate change that is stoking more deadly heatwaves,
floods, and rising sea levels around the world.
Indonesia, Southeast Asia's largest economy, is already one of the world's biggest emitters of greenhouse gases.
Market
Forces said the Export-Import Bank of China (China Exim) was involved
in seven of the coal power deals, the Japan Bank for International
Cooperation (JBIC) and the China Development Bank (CDB) in five deals
each, and the Korea Development Bank (KDB) in one deal.
The Export-Import Bank of Korea (Korea Eximbank) is also involved in one deal, together with JBIC, it said.
JBIC
declined to comment on the projects it is involved in in Indonesia but
said in an email that emerging countries are looking to expand their
power sources in response to surging demand and are using coal due to
its economic efficiency and reliability.
"JBIC,
as a policy-based financial institution of Japan, will work in tandem
with the Japanese government to financially support projects which
leverage on highly-efficient Japanese technology and know-how in line
with the host country's context," the bank said.
Korean Eximbank declined to comment.
Multiple
calls to the public relations departments of CDB and China Exim went
unanswered. KDB did not respond to emails seeking comment.
On
their websites, the banks say they have environmental guidelines for
projects they fund, and are committed to protecting the environment and
supporting green energy.
Against the trend
In
supporting the coal projects, the banks offer terms that are
low-interest and long term, making the projects possible. The plants
"would not exist without external funding," Mr. Vincent said.
Globally,
many countries are shutting down or putting on hold plans for
coal-fired power plants as costs for wind and solar power plummet. China
has been leading the charge, in part to limit pollution and climate
change – though it has also been financially backing new coal plants in
Pakistan.
The deals in Indonesia between
January 2010 and March 2017 represent 21 coal power projects with a
combined capacity of 13.1 gigawatts.
Market
Forces said its analysis of Indonesia's latest Electricity Supply
Business Plan from 2017 to 2026 – where coal is the largest source of
energy at 50 percent – shows there is likely to be a significant
oversupply of energy.
Hozue
Hatae, a researcher with Friends of the Earth Japan, which has been
working with communities in Indonesia, said demand for electricity has
not been increasing as much as estimated.
A
thorough analysis should be done to determine whether the plants are
necessary and whether there are sensible alternatives, Ms. Hatae said.
Without
that, the health and livelihoods of communities in Indonesia would be
put at risk for "an exercise in temporarily extending the market for
coal mining and coal power generation," Vincent said.
Kimiko Hirata, international director for Tokyo-based environmental group Kiko Network, agreed.
"We
have seen lots of human rights violation and environmental impacts
caused by [coal-fired power projects] in the past," Ms. Hirata said via
email.
Fonte: CS Monitor
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