The fact is that coal
plants are now officially declared obsolete by this move. What is more, they are and getting out of the
coal business is timely. It will even be
hugely effective in reducing the globes carbon footprint as it has in the USA.
There are so many
better solutions and technology coming down the pipeline, that coal plants are
becoming a nasty alternative used only because of costs and that only
sometime. The wind down of the thermal
coal industry is already well begun and will only gather momentum. After all, natural gas is allowing utilities
to add and replace power quickly and at lower costs to such an extent that
mothballing coal plants have become an attractive option however tightly you
control the market.
We can expect this
policy to be progressively adopted elsewhere as it is driven by contractors who
prefer to not have capital stranded as that is what is promised here.
World Bank Turns Away
From Coal
Coal-fired
power generation will only get financial support in “rare circumstances.”
KATHERINE
TWEED: JULY 22, 2013
The
World Bank announced last week that is largely turning away from providing
funding for coal-fired power plants, except in rare situations where there is
no feasible alternative.
In
the World Bank’s latest policy directive, Energy Sector Directions Paper, the organization said that
in an effort to bring energy access to the more than 1 billion people that live
without it, the priority would be affordable and reliable energy.
“Grid,
mini-grid, and off-grid solutions will all be pursued for electricity. In
rural, remote or isolated areas, off-grid solutions based on renewable energy
combined with energy-efficient technologies could be the most rapid means of
providing cost-effective energy services," wrote the Bank.
There
is still an open question of just how sustainable the World Bank’s energy
investments will be. The policy paper also put large hydropower back on the
table, even though many environmentalists argue there are other options.
“The
World Bank ignores that better solutions are readily available,” Peter Bosshard
of advocacy group International Rivers told Reuters. "In the past 10 years, governments
and private investors installed more new wind power than hydropower
capacity."
The
same could be said of Kosovo, where the World Bank is considering
loan guarantees for a coal-fired power plant. Jigar Shah, founder of
SunEdison, argued on Greentech Media that Kosovo also has other resources to
meet the 600-megawatt energy shortfall.
“European
investors have already proposed over 200 megawatts of privately funded wind
energy investments in Kosovo,” he wrote. “This shows that industry is ready to
move at the scale needed to put clean energy to work in Kosovo today.”
World
Bank president Dr. Jim Yong Kim has called for action on climate change since
taking the helm last year. In the World Bank’s Environment Strategy 2012-2022,
the working group suggested greenhouse gas emission analysis when evaluating
investment lending for energy, transportation and forestry projects.
“The
critical importance of shifting the global energy sector to a more
environmentally sustainable development path has never been greater,” the World
Bank stated in the energy sector paper.
Despite
the resolve, the paper also calls for quick, low-cost options to those without
energy access: “The argument for supporting the lowest-cost -- and hence the
most affordable -- option to meet critical needs in the near term is
particularly strong when extending access to those without modern energy.”
In
the past, the World Bank has vastly underestimated
some countries’ potential for renewable energy. And while the bank
said it was open to supporting higher-cost projects that had smaller
environmental footprints, it noted they would have to come with concessional
finance to cover the incremental costs or strong client demand.
But
many of the world’s poor are already paying high prices for electricity. The
World Bank noted that many countries in sub-Saharan Africa pay about $0.20 to
$0.50 per kilowatt-hour, compared to the U.S. average of about $0.11 per
kilowatt-hour. For one project out of Columbia University, SharedSolar,
the cost of a scalable microgrid can be cost-competitive for rural villages that
do not have access to the grid.
To
get the most bang for its buck, the World Bank says that it will focus more on
energy efficiency, and in particular removing barriers to energy efficiency
investment. Where possible, the bank said it would work on energy market reform
and removing subsidies that create a skewed playing field.
The
move by the World Bank comes on the heels of President Obama announcing that
the U.S. would stop investing in coal-fired power plants overseas. Despite the
visibility of the World Bank, however, the multilateral institution estimates
that the $8 billion it spends annually on energy projects is less than 1
percent of what would be needed to meet the goals of the United Nation’s Sustainable
Energy for All initiative, which aims to double the share of renewables
globally, double the rate of energy efficiency and ensure universal access to
sustainable energy to all by 2030.
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