Indonesia, ADB launch first coal power plant retirement deal
14 Nov 2022
NUSA DUA,
Indonesia (Reuters) -Indonesia, the Asian Development Bank and a private power
firm are teaming up to refinance and prematurely retire a coal-fired power
plant, the first such project under a groundbreaking carbon emissions reduction
programme, they announced on Monday.
The
660-megawatt Cirebon 1 power plant in West Java would be refinanced in a $250
million to $300 million deal on condition that it be taken out of service 10 to
15 years before the end of its 40- to 50-year useful life under a memorandum of
understanding (MOU), Asian Development Bank (ADB) officials said.
The
Manila-based multilateral lender and Indonesian Finance Minister Sri Mulyani
Indrawati announced the MOU with independent power producer Cirebon Electric
Power in Bali on the sidelines of the G20 leaders summit.
The deal,
final details of which would be refined under the MOU, could eliminate as much
as 30 million tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions over a 15-year period - the
equivalent of taking 800,000 cars off the road, ADB estimates.
The
agreement is the first under the ADB's Energy Transition Mechanism (ETM), an
initiative to blend private investment funds, public finance and philanthropic
donations to buy up or refinance coal power plants in Southeast Asia to retire
them early as the region shifts to renewable energy sources.
The ETM
project, first reported by Reuters last year, was developed by ADB with input
from private sector firms including Prudential, Citi and Black Rock to
eliminate decades of future carbon emissions by altering the economics of coal
plant operations.
"The
problem of legacy coal-fired power in Southeast Asia qualifies as one of the
single biggest problems for the energy transition, if not the world," ADB
regional vice president Ahmed M. Saeed, told Reuters in an interview.
"With
this announcement, we're taking the first steps in what was an ambitious
project and making it real," he added.
SAME
OWNER, SHORTER LIFE
The deal
does not change the ownership structure for the 12-year-old Cirebon 1 plant, a
key power supplier to Jakarta with a 30-year supply contract to state grid
operator Perusahaan Listrik Negara (PLN).
Instead,
it would compensate owner Cirebon Electric for the present value of foregone
profits from the plant's early retirement with a new, lower-interest concessional
loan arranged through ADB's private sector arm, said David Elzinga, ADB's
senior climate change energy specialist.
The deal
will include funds from Indonesia's $500 million allocation from the Climate
Investment Fund, but the structure is still coming together, Elzinga said,
adding that ADB had initially requested a $50 million contribution from the
fund.
ADB also
said a number financial firms and philanthropic groups have expressed interest
in participating in the transaction.
The deal
also marks a shift of the initial ETM concept of an "acquire and
retire" model to a "refinance and accelerate retirement" model,
Saeed said, adding that Cirebon, whose shareholders include Japan's Marubeni
Corp and Korean Midland Electric Power Co, was motivated to take an active role
in the transition rather than simply offload the plan.
"It
became clear that it's a simpler structure to leave the existing owner in
place," Saeed said. "And so we could deliver economic value through
financing as opposed to a change in equity ownership."
The ADB
officials said they expect the Cirebon deal to give private investors more
confidence to explore future participation, and that the development finance
institution's leadership may help shield them from any negative public
perceptions regarding new investments in coal financing.
The deal
comes amid growing calls for multilateral development banks to stretch their
balance sheets and harness more private sector capital to finance the massive
investments needed to fight climate change. The World Bank is due to produce an
evolution roadmap to meet these challenges in December.
Indonesia, ADB launch first coal power plant retirement deal