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Medium-Term Energy Development* March 2014 Directorate of Energy, Telecommunications and Informatics Ministry of National Development Planning/National Development Planning Agency * A draft for the 3rd RPJMN Slide 1 introduction Slide 2 Prolog • Indonesia will have ‘a new elected’ President in October 2014 • RPJMN 2015-2019 (National Medium-Term Development Plan) should be formulated – by new President – the elaboration of the Vision, Mission, and Program of the (elected) President. – will be elaborated into the Annual Government Working Plan – implementation of the RPJPN (3rd phase of the RPJPN) • RPJPN: National Long-Term Development Plan – Long term strategy as guidance for mid-term national development plan. – A 20 year plan (2005-2025) Slide 3 Development Planning System * At Central Government Level 20 year period National Long-term Development Plan RPJP National Guidance 5 year period National Mid-term Development Plan RPJM Nasional Guidance Input Government Annual Working Plan Reference RKP Harmonized Guidance Annual Government Budget Plan Annual Government Budget Ministry Strategic Plan (Midterm) Guidance Elaborated Annually Renstra KL Renja KL Ministry Annual Working Plan Guidance RAPBN RKA-KL APBN Rincian APBN Annual Ministry Working Budget Plan Annual Government Budget Detail Slide 4 direction Slide 5 Directions for Mid-Term Plan Formulation RPJPN (Long-Term Plan) Goal • • • Staging • 3rd RPJMN • Achieving income per capita equivalent to middle income country (MIC) in 2025 Unemployment level below 5% Poverty level below 5% Emphasizing attainment of economic competitiveness based on natural resources, human resources, and science and technology. Focusing on: • Electricity supply reliable and efficient • Starting nuclear for electricity utilization* Basic infrastructure must be fulfilled MP3EI* Malaysia * Master Plan on Acceleration and Expansion of Economic Development 2010 2025 PDB: USD 4.0 – 4.5 Trillion income/capita: USD 14,250 – 15,500 PDB: USD 700 Billion income/capita: USD 3,000 2045 PDB: USD 15.0 – 17.5 Trillion Income/capita: USD 44,500 – 49,000 USD 16,794 Thailand USD 9.503 Philippines USD 4,410 Vietnam USD 3,788 Sumber: IMF Data, 2012; in US Dollars Slide 6 Necessary Condition Projected GDP Growth per Capita source: BPS Data, 2012, Bappenas projection Economic growth vs infrastructure investment in Indonesia (19972013) $16,000.00 10% 10.00 10.00% 5.00 5.00% - 0.00% $14,000.00 11% $12,000.00 12% $10,000.00 $8,000.00 $6,000.00 2012: USD 3,563 (5.00) -5.00% $4,000.00 Growth $2,000.00 (10.00) -10.00% Total Infrastructure Investment Share of GDP, % $- (15.00) -15.00% Investment in infrastructure has direct impacts to economic growth. To achieve MIC status, Indonesia needs 12% nominal economic growth. Slide 7 * Source: Background Study Presentation current condition Slide 8 Indonesia Selected Indicators for 2011, Source: IEA, Key World Energy Statistics Country Indonesia Thailand Philippines Malaysia Japan Population (million) 242.33 69.52 94.85 28.86 127.83 GDP (billion USD; 2005) 402.19 210.25 136.26 187.28 4621.97 GDP PPP (billion USD; 2005) 992.1 530.78 345.03 409.05 3932.2 GDP PPP/pop (USD; 2005/cap) 4,094.00 7,634.93 3,637.64 14,173.60 30,761.17 Energy Prod. (MTOE) 394.57 68.74 23.89 84.27 51.67 Net Import (MTOE) -184.8 54.22 18.04 -4.05 421.1 TPES (MTOE) 209.01 119.15 40.45 75.91 461.47 TPES/Pop (TOE/capita) 0.86 1.71 0.43 2.63 3.61 TPES/GDP (TOE/000 USD;2005) 0.52 0.57 0.3 0.41 0.1 Elec. Cons (TWh) 165.71 154.19 61.5 122.12 1003.09 Elec. Cons/Pop (kWh/cap) 0.21 0.22 0.12 0.19 0.12 CO2 Emission (MT) 425.88 243.19 77.12 193.96 1186.04 Slide 9 Strategic Issues 1. Exclusive energy development Access to electricity services is limited • Electrification ratio: 80% • Capacity/production: 44 GW/180 thousand GWh Access to energy for cooking is limited • City gas only covers ± 150.000 HH • LPG supplies ± 44 million HH Access to Modern Energy Service in ASEAN, 2011 source: IEA, ASEAN Energy Outlook Slide 10 … 2. Energy security and resilience Incremental energy demand in Indonesia, 2011-2035 • Highly rely on fuel oil Source: IEA, ASEAN Energy Outlook • Lack of alternative fuels (natural gas, biofuel) for transportation • Significant imports of crude oil and fuel oil • Consumption 78,9 million KL (import: 41,2 million KL or 52%); Refinery capacity:1.150 thousand BPD. • Lack of national energy reserves • Pricing policy is not sustainable Fossil Fuel Net Trade by Country • Subsidy (electricity and fuel oil) is not only Source: IEA, ASEAN Energy Outlook for the poor but also for the rich • Impede development of new and renewable energy and Overburden government spending • Export commodity vs value added • Unbalanced energy mix Slide 11 Challenges Competitiveness Index* ‘Middle income country trap’ Year 2013 Ina Mal ay Thai Viet Philip . Infras 82 25 61 110 98 Road 78 23 42 102 87 Railway 44 18 72 58 89 Port 89 24 56 98 116 Air Transport 68 20 34 92 113 Electricity 89 37 58 95 93 Cellular 62 27 49 21 81 Fixed-line 82 79 96 88 109 Demografic bonus Geografi – archipelagic (resources and demand mismatch) Environment – carrying capacity Domestic investment capacity Technology capability *World Economic Forum Slide 12 International Benchmark Electrification Ratio (%), 2012 100 80 60 40 20 0 99.3 94 73.7 100 97 89.7 65 97.3 85 Low Electrification Ratio – Unable to support the country’s growth 32 Tariff Comparison 0.15 Electrification Ratio (%) Urban (%) Rural (%) 0.1 0.12 0.11 0.096 0.092 0.0620.07 0.11 0.1 0.090.081 0.05 0 Thailand Indonesia Malaysia Philippines Vietnam Residential Tariff (US$/kWh) Industrial Tariff (US$/kWh) Energy Efficiency (KOE/$2005 PPP) Smaller means more efficient Indonesia 0.3 0.2 Japan 0.1 China 0 Thailand * Source: Bappenas Background Study Presentation Higher energy efficiency which shows lack of energy conservation and unbalanced energy mix (dominated by fossil fuel). Malaysia Slide 13 objectives and policies Slide 14 Objectives 2015-2019 1. Achieving sufficient economic growth 2. Lower CO2 emission, compared to BAU Inclusive basic energy modern service 1. 2. Electricity access : ER nearly 100% 1. PP capacity ~ on/off-grids 2. Utilizing new and renewable energy Energy access for HH 1. Citi Gas Development 2. LPG service expansion 3. Usage of local energy (biogas) Enhanced energy security and resilience 1. 2. 3. * Modern energy access is defined as a household having relaible and affordable 4. access to clean cooking facilities and electricity (incl. adequate level of consumption) Enhancing final energy supply 1. Increasing Oil refinery capacity 2. Developing Nat. gas transmission lines 3. Setting up national energy reserves Alternative fuel for transportation: 1. Providing nat. gas fuel pumps 2. Developing biofuel Increasing energy efficiency 1. Audit energy and energy conservation Formulated pricing policy Slide 15 Main Policies • • • • • Energy diversification Prioritizing local new and renewable energy Enhancing oil and gas infrastructure Promoting energy conservation Optimizing pricing policy Slide 16 investments requirements and funding Slide 17 Investment Requirement 2015-2019 * Numbers not final Sector Estimated (in Trillion IDR) Roads 851 Rail 222 Urban Transport 115 Implementation needs: (1) Sea Transport 424 extra commitment; (2) strong Ferry 80 leadership; and (3) a holistic Air Transport 165 bureaucratic reform Electricity 1,080 Energy 420 Water Resources 845 Clean Water and Waste 666 Housing 384 ICT 200 Total 5.452 Slide 18 * Source: Bappenas Background Study Presentation Source of Fund Government Spending Estimated requirements IDR. 5,452 T Financing Gap ± IDR 1,178T ~ 22% ± IDR 350T SoE ~ 6% ± IDR 1,090T PPP ~ 20% ± IDR 93T Off Balance Sheet ~ 2% IDR 2,741T Gap ~ 50% Alternative Financing 1. The figure shows CAPEX only and rehabilitation, not include O&M 2. Not final Slide 19 * Source: Bappenas Background Study Presentation … Central Government Government Funding Regional Government SOE Funding PPP Funding Off-BS Funding Strategic Funding Description APBN Annual central budget allocated for infrastructure. ODA Loan Foreign currency based loan from donor. Country Bond Bond issuance based on country credit rating. Asset Liquidation Fund generated from asset sales, securitization, IPO of BUMN. APBD Annual regional budget allocated for infrastructure. Municipal Bond Bond issuance based on municipal credit rating. Regional Direct Loan Direct lending to regional government. Cash pool+ operating CF Funded by SOE’s liquid asset or operating cashflow Company Bond Bond issuance based on SOE credit rating. SOE Direct Loan Donor’s sub-sovereign loan. Commercial bank loan. Private Fund with Gov’t support Investor’s equity with project finance + VGF and guarantee Availability Payment Investor’s equity with project finance, based on multi-year annuity payment contract from central/regional government SOE Direct Loan with sovereign guarantee Donor or commercial bank loan based on sovereign guarantee Vertical, Horizontal Split Hybrid of above methods by splitting assets Cross-sector package Hybrid of above methods by packaging linked projects Others Infrastructure fund/bond, Project bond and other financial pack Social-related Infrastructure Suitability of Funding to Infrastructure Funding Method Economic Infrastructure Slide 20 * Source: Bappenas Background Study Presentation *)Regional direct loan still not a valid law and/or approach yet. Strategic Projects* • • • • • • • • • Fast Track Programs (Phase 1&2), IPP and PPP Developing geothermal power plants City gas projects: 80 thousand customers Oil refinery 1 units (300 thousand BPD) Developing national energy reserves Floating storage refueling unit: 2 units, 250 BCF Gas transmission lines: 680 km, 200 BCF Natural gas pumps: 55 units Pilot project for nuclear power plant: 2 units * proposed Slide 21 THANKS ! Direktorat Energi, Telekomunikasi, dan Informatika Lantai 4, Gedung Utama, BAPPENAS Jl. Taman Suropati No.2, Menteng, Jakarta 10310 Tel/Fax: (021) 391 2422 [email protected] “when you talk, you’re repeating what you already know, but if you listen, you may learn something new” Slide 22