4.8 Article

Moving beyond the NDCs: ASEAN pathways to a net-zero emissions power sector in 2050

Journal

APPLIED ENERGY
Volume 311, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.apenergy.2022.118580

Keywords

Net-zero emissions; Power system; Renewable energy; Power sector; ASEAN; Climate change

Funding

  1. ASEAN
  2. Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Norway [RAS 2805 RAS 17/0013]

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This paper uses the Low Emissions Analysis Platform (LEAP) to assess the pathways for achieving net-zero emissions in the ASEAN power sector by 2050. The LEAP simulations indicate that ASEAN member states need to utilize their renewable energy potential and undergo a technological transformation to reach the net-zero emissions goal.
The power sector is one of the major contributors to global greenhouse gas emissions while also being vulnerable to climate change in its own right. Accordingly, the global power sector needs to accelerate decarbonization. This paper assesses power sector pathways to net-zero emissions by 2050 for the Association of Southeast Asia Nations (ASEAN) using the Low Emissions Analysis Platform (LEAP). In addition to simulating a net-zero emissions scenario, the paper builds reference and renewable policy scenarios, enabling an analysis of additional measures required beyond the business as usual and current policy trajectories to achieve net-zero emissions. The LEAP simulation results indicate that under the net-zero emissions scenario, ASEAN member states need to swiftly capitalize on their currently underutilized renewable energy potential to reach net-zero emissions by 2050. By then, there will have to be a substantial transformation of the technological portfolio with variable renewable energy and energy storage coming to play central roles. The LEAP simulations also indicate that renewable and energy storage technologies are more cost-competitive than carbon capture and storage for achieving the longterm net-zero emissions goal. In the LEAP modeling, GHG emissions rise until they peak in 2029, then gradually decline until reaching zero by 2050. Meanwhile, the emission abatement cost is 16 USD/ton CO(2)e in the renewable policy scenario and 12 USD/CO(2)e in the net-zero emissions scenario.

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