Virtual Workshop Registration Click to view
Time of Event
Day 1: 09:30-17:10 Tokyo time
Day 2: 09:35-16:45 Tokyo time
Day 3: 14:50-17:25 Tokyo time
Summary
A growing number of countries in developing Asia are committing to more ambitious carbon reduction targets to achieve a 1.5 degrees Celsius global temperature reduction needed to fight climate change. For example, Indonesia, Nepal, the People’s Republic of China, Thailand, and Viet Nam have pledged to move to net zero carbon emissions by 2050 while Kazakhstan will seek to phase out coal by mid-century and realize carbon neutrality by 2060. Yet, achieving these climate objectives will be highly challenging as coal remains a major source fuel for the energy sector in developing Asia.
To support these goals, the Asian Development Bank recently launched a new Energy Transition Mechanism (ETM), a public-private finance vehicle that aims to lower emissions through the early retirement or repurposing of coal-fired power plants, and use the proceeds for clean energy development. The ETM has the potential to be scaled up across Asia and the Pacific, as well as in Latin America and Africa, and could become the world’s largest carbon reduction model.
This virtual workshop will spotlight new research on the transition from coal to low-carbon energy in Asia and the Pacific. It will focus on related policy challenges and possible solutions. It will also highlight the growth potential and implications of the Asian Development Bank’s Energy Transition Mechanism for both the decommissioning of coal-fired power plants and promoting clean energy development.
Objectives
- Explore energy security, economic growth, and climate sustainability needs
- Examine the acceleration of coal plant retirement at scale, including the Asian Development Bank’s Energy Transition Mechanism and Accelerating Coal Transition investment program
- Discuss facilitating energy transition through power grid interconnection capacity expansion, the impact of banning coal, and the implications of energy transition for coal exporting countries
Target Participants
- Policy makers from Asian Development Bank member economies
- Experts from think tanks, universities, and international organizations, students, and other interested members of the public
Output
- Greater understanding of the transition from coal to low-carbon energy in Asia and the Pacific
- Identification of related policy challenges and solutions
- Event materials to be made available on the ADBI website
Partners
- Asian Development Bank
- Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, United States
- China Coal Society