1 / 22

Update on the power situation in Asia

Update on the power situation in Asia. Edgar van der Meer Energy Analyst. Outline. Generation Capacity Asia and Selected Countries Global Fuel Costs Demand Asian Demand Worldwide trends Energy Shortfall Outlook Where are the tariffs headed?. 2013 Electricity Generation Capacity.

zarola
Download Presentation

Update on the power situation in Asia

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Update on the power situation in Asia Edgar van der Meer Energy Analyst 17th World Chlor-Alkali Conference

  2. Outline Generation Capacity Asia and Selected Countries Global Fuel Costs Demand Asian Demand Worldwide trends Energy Shortfall Outlook Where are the tariffs headed? 17th World Chlor-Alkali Conference

  3. 2013 Electricity Generation Capacity • In 2013, over half of Asia’s Electricity Generation Capacity is fueled by Coal • Over ¾ of supply will come from only 3 sources: Coal, Hydro & Gas 17th World Chlor-Alkali Conference

  4. 2020 Electricity Generation Capacity • While lower, Coal will still be the major source for installed capacity in 2020 • Hydro and Gas remain in the number 2 and 3 spots but there’s an increasing mix 17th World Chlor-Alkali Conference

  5. 2020 Comparison Asia vs. World 17th World Chlor-Alkali Conference

  6. Generation Capacity (MW) China 17th World Chlor-Alkali Conference

  7. Generation Capacity (MW) India 17th World Chlor-Alkali Conference

  8. Generation Capacity (MW) Indonesia 17th World Chlor-Alkali Conference

  9. Generation Capacity (MW) Japan 17th World Chlor-Alkali Conference

  10. Generation Capacity (MW) Korea - South 17th World Chlor-Alkali Conference

  11. Price Effects of Coal-Fuelled Electricity Generation Positives Negatives Carbon Taxation High Capital Cost Environmental Cost Recovery • Wide Availability • Easy Transport • High Energy Value 17th World Chlor-Alkali Conference

  12. Price Effects of Gas-Fuelled Electricity Generation Positives Negatives Difficult Transport Centralized Availability • High Energy Value • New Reserves Increasing Supply • Efficiencies in use of Technology (CC / ACT) 17th World Chlor-Alkali Conference

  13. Generation Capacity Conclusions • Asian Electricity Sector has a heavy reliance on Coal • Disproportionate to the Rest of the World • Gas influence Rising • High Oil Prices Pushing Diversification 17th World Chlor-Alkali Conference

  14. Price Developments of Fuel 17th World Chlor-Alkali Conference

  15. Raw Fuel Costs per kWh Source: BP/EIA 17th World Chlor-Alkali Conference

  16. What was your share? 17,691,480,000,000 kWh $4,560,834,057,610 17th World Chlor-Alkali Conference

  17. Net Generation and Net Consumption 17th World Chlor-Alkali Conference

  18. 17th World Chlor-Alkali Conference

  19. So where are we headed? 17th World Chlor-Alkali Conference

  20. Conclusions • Dependency on Coal • High oil prices • Lower cost of Gas • More grid interconnections • Middle East Stability 17th World Chlor-Alkali Conference

  21. Thank you 17th World Chlor-Alkali Conference

  22. Receive a Free Report http://www.nrgexpert.com/chlor-alkali-conference-delegate-report/ 17th World Chlor-Alkali Conference

More Related