OVERVIEW
Indonesia’s
Electricity Statistics
* Renewable Energy Planning and Development, PLN 2015
Electrification Ratio
of South East
Asia Regions
Electricity is critical to national development but it must be delivered reliably and sustainably. These challenges are compounded when demand growth exceeds the growth of supply. Out of major ASEAN countries, Indonesia has the lowest rate of electrification.
Electrification Ratio
of South East
Asia Regions
Electricity is critical to national development but it must be delivered reliably and sustainably. These challenges are compounded when demand growth exceeds the growth of supply. Out of major ASEAN countries, Indonesia has the lowest rate of electrification.
Indonesia’s Energy Roadmap
Final Energy Mix
(Nation Energy Policy, Govt. Reg No.79/2014)
Indonesia’s Energy Roadmap
Final Energy Mix
(Nation Energy Policy, Govt. Reg No.79/2014)
Energy Mix of Power Generation
(General Planning of National Electricity – RUKN Draft 2015-2034)
NREÂ Development
Roadmap
To meet national electricity demand, electricity in Indonesia is provided by the national electricity company, PT PLN, but also by the private sector via Independent Power Producers (IPPs) and Private Power Utilities (PPUs).
Roughly, PLN provides 70-75% of the nation’s power, IPPs provide about 17% and PPUs about 10%. The IPP share is rising.
At current consumption rates, Indonesia has about 75 years of coal, 33 years of gas and only 12 years of oil unless new reserves are discovered.
So, the Indonesian Government’s drive to lessen its dependence on carbon-based fuels for power is not only driven by a recognition that sustainable energy is environmentally preferable, it is also driven by the very practical economic fact that within the near-term, Indonesia will deplete its reserves of carbon-based fuels. Therefore Indonesia, through its National Energy Policy, is targeting to have 23% of its Energy Generation comes from New and Renewable Energy resources.
NREÂ Development
Roadmap
To meet national electricity demand, electricity in Indonesia is provided by the national electricity company, PT PLN, but also by the private sector via Independent Power Producers (IPPs) and Private Power Utilities (PPUs).
Roughly, PLN provides 70-75% of the nation’s power, IPPs provide about 17% and PPUs about 10%. The IPP share is rising.
At current consumption rates, Indonesia has about 75 years of coal, 33 years of gas and only 12 years of oil unless new reserves are discovered.
So, the Indonesian Government’s drive to lessen its dependence on carbon-based fuels for power is not only driven by a recognition that sustainable energy is environmentally preferable, it is also driven by the very practical economic fact that within the near-term, Indonesia will deplete its reserves of carbon-based fuels. Therefore Indonesia, through its National Energy Policy, is targeting to have 23% of its Energy Generation comes from New and Renewable Energy resources.