Report: South Korea and Australia remain world’s top producers of emissions from coal
08 Sep 2023
Per capita, both Australia and South
Korea produce more than triple the world’s average coal power emissions.
https://www.power-technology.com/news/australia-south-korea-top-coal-power-emissions-g20/
A cooling tower at EnergyAustralia Holdings’ Yallourn Power
Station in the Latrobe Valley, Victoria, Australia. Credit: Carla
Gottgens/Bloomberg via Getty Images.
Australia and South
Korea are on average the top two coal power polluters out of all G20 member
states, a position both countries have held since 2020, according to analysis
from the climate think tank Ember published on Tuesday.
Per capita, both
nations produce more than triple the world’s average coal power emissions.
While pollution from coal power has been declining in both countries, they
still remain far ahead the rest of the G20, Ember’s report finds, although it excludes the EU
as a region from its analysis. The report comes as G20 leaders prepare to meet for their
annual summit in New Delhi, India, on 9–10 September.
Australia ranks top for
per capita emissions from production and consumption of coal power in the G20,
despite a recent uptick in installed renewables capacity, with 47%, or 130.9
terawatt-hours (TWh), of its electricity still coming from coal. Last year, the
country’s coal power emissions fell by approximately 5% as coal generation
dropped by 8TWh.
Second on the list, 34%
of South Korea’s electricity mix is coal, with solar and wind capacity at 5%,
falling well below the global average, which stands at 12%.
The report also found
that 12 of the G20 economies have seen per capita coal emissions fall as a
result of renewables ramp up, with the UK leading the way with a 93% drop in
coal power emissions since 2015. However, emissions from some emerging
economies, such as Indonesia and Turkey, are still increasing. Between 2015 and
2022, per capita coal power emissions surged in Indonesia by 56%, with
emissions in Turkey increasing by 41%. Russia, China and India have also seen
large increases in coal power emissions over the past seven years.
G20 nations account for
approximately 85% of global gross domestic product and contribute 80% of the
world’s total power sector emissions.
According to Ember, the
report shows that uptake of clean energy technologies remains too slow to meaningfully
drive down fossil fuel use and keep the world within reach of the 1.5°C average
global temperature rise limit set out in the Paris Agreement. As climate change
intensifies, G20 countries must be “united in their efforts to triple
renewables and plan for rapid and deep cuts in coal power generation”, the
authors write.
Non-profit Global
Energy Monitor published a report earlier this year suggesting
that coal plants must be retired at four-and-a-half times the current rate if
the world is to maintain its 1.5°C target. It also noted that China’s planned coal capacity increase far
offsets phase-outs in other parts of the world.
Dave Jones, global
insights lead at Ember, said in a press statement: “China and India are often
blamed as the world’s big coal power polluters. But when you take population
into account, South Korea and Australia were the worst polluters still in 2022.
As mature economies, they should be scaling up renewable electricity
ambitiously and confidently enough to enable coal to be phased out by 2030.”
Australia’s grid
operator, AEMO, has warned that without innovation and proper investment, the
country is at high risk of power shortages if it
retires 62% of its coal power fleet over the next decade as planned. The New
South Wales Government has now entered into talks with Origin Energy to discuss extending the life of Australia’s largest coal-fired
power station.
G20 countries are divided on proposals to aim to triple installed
renewable capacity by 2030, and double this again by 2040, with no consensus
either on the specifics of a fossil fuel phase-out. Seven G20 nations – Brazil,
China, India, Japan, South Korea, South Africa and the US – have not yet
unveiled coal phase-out strategies.
Aditya Lolla, Asia
programme lead at Ember, said: “India, as the host of the G20 summit [on 9–10
September], has the opportunity to assume climate leadership in the G20 and
hold the bloc accountable. India’s plans to ramp up renewable energy seem to
align well with the COP28 president’s call for tripling renewables by 2030.
India’s early backing to this call can not only influence the G20 into action
but also ensure that the developed countries bring their per capita emissions
down.”