http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/IE26Ae01.html
May 26, 2007 



Southeast Asia's climate-change challenge
By Andrew Symon 

SINGAPORE - Southeast Asia is possibly one of the most vulnerable areas in the 
global-climate-change scenarios now being put forward by scientists. Many of 
the region's estimated 500 million people live in either low-lying river deltas 
or far-flung islands that will be inundated if waters rise significantly. 

Some idea of the damage that climate change could cause over time was witnessed 
in the tsunami that inundated and destroyed coastal settlements on Indonesia's 
Sumatra island in December 2004. While the tsunami was a sudden shock that came 
without warning, it gave a geographic perspective to what could be anticipated 
under model scenarios of a more gradual increase in sea and river-delta water 
levels caused by climate change. 

The international climate-change spotlight has not yet fallen on Southeast 
Asia. With the key question now being addressed - what will succeed the present 
Kyoto Accord when it expires in 2012 - attention is focused more on the 
industrializing giants - China, India and Brazil - and how they should be 
incorporated under a successor framework. But Southeast Asia's 500 million 
people arguably should not be overlooked. 

To date, concern and debate over greenhouse-gas emission and climate change 
remain muted in Southeast Asia. Eight countries in the region, namely Cambodia, 
Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam, 
have ratified the 1997 Kyoto Accord to the 1992 United Nations Framework 
Convention on Climate Change. 

Landlocked Laos has not, nor has the tiny petroleum-rich Islamic sultanate of 
Brunei. As developing countries - including Singapore, which retains this 
status formally in international organizations despite its developed-world per 
capita income - none face any mandatory obligations to reduce gases that 
contribute to the so-called greenhouse effect, the trapping of the sun's heat 
within the atmosphere. 

The region can take advantage of the Kyoto Accord's Clean Development Mechanism 
(CDM), whereby developed countries having to meet targets under Kyoto can gain 
credits by funding projects in non-compliance countries that reduce greenhouse 
emissions. But as of mid-November 2006, of the 173 CDM projects established or 
seeking registration in East Asia, 70% were in India, 14% in China and only 12% 
in Southeast Asia. 

Despite Kyoto and the climate-change debate elsewhere, energy production and 
consumption in Southeast Asia remain business as usual. Individual governments 
and the regional Association of Southeast Asian Nations often make assertions 
about the desirability of greater energy efficiency, cleaner energy 
technologies and greater reliance on renewables. But at the moment there is no 
major departure from the region's 1990s trends in energy use. 

The Singaporean government appears to be positioning itself for what it must 
see as the need for greater regional efforts over climate change. After 
ratifying Kyoto late last year, Singapore recently announced a new program to 
promote research and development, test-bedding and undertaking pilot projects 
in clean energy on the island. 

These would potentially have applications elsewhere. Underlying Singapore's new 
enthusiasm for clean energy is a week of government-endorsed conferences on 
biofuels, carbon trading, and finance for renewable energy, as well as an 
industry exhibition, Sustainable Energy Asia, to be held on June 12-15. 

Public concern in the region is not especially strong compared with the 
situation in, say, Western Europe, the United States and Australia (even though 
the latter two countries are not signatories to the Kyoto Accord). The public 
focus on the issues varies from country to country. In Thailand, for example, 
community and non-governmental opposition to plans to build coal-fired power 
plants have historically been strong, forcing the government to postpone 
projects indefinitely in 2002. 

The smog ahead
Yet projections by the Asia-Pacific Energy Research Center (APERC) in Tokyo, a 
body operating under the auspices of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation 
(APEC) forum, show a fourfold increase in total carbon-dioxide emissions - the 
major greenhouse gas - from 2002 to 2030 produced by energy production and 
consumption in Southeast Asia. 

The total will be twice that of Japan in 2030, nearly a third of the US total, 
and a quarter that of China (China and the US will be the world's largest and 
second-largest emitters of greenhouse gases in 2030). Note, though, that these 
projections in APERC's 2006 APEC Energy Demand and Supply Outlook, Projections 
to 2030, assume no major departure from existing energy production and 
consumption patterns as a result of policies on greenhouse gases and climate 
change. 

One major Southeast Asia-related negative impact on international 
greenhouse-gas reduction efforts comes from the ongoing destruction of the 
region's forests and jungles, especially in Indonesia's Kalimantan and Sumatra, 
in the Malaysian states of Sarawak and Sabah on Borneo island, and in the 
Mekong region in the mountains in Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos, as well as in 
Myanmar and Thailand. Southeast Asia's extensive wet rice agriculture also 
results in the release of another greenhouse gas, methane. 

There are also increasing efforts both commercially and promoted by government 
to develop and expand biofuel production - bio-diesel from palm oil is 
especially favored. This drive has been sparked by both high global petroleum 
prices and the region's increasing reliance on petroleum imports, particularly 
from the Middle East. 

Although biofuel is often pitched as a sustainable energy source, there is 
concern that the rush to develop it results or will result in more destruction 
of old forests to clear the way for oil-palm plantations. The large-scale 
expansion of palm-oil production in Indonesia's Sumatra and in Kalimantan on 
Borneo, which has been ongoing for the past decade, is already responsible for 
another major environmental problem - the haze that affects Singapore, Malaysia 
and Indonesia when land is burned to prepare for clearing. 

There is a regional shift under way toward more natural gas, which is desirable 
in terms of its lower carbon-dioxide emissions, though it is sometimes 
forgotten that upstream production often releases carbon dioxide unless 
engineering measures are taken to re-inject  the gas. And natural gas continues 
to face obstacles due to delays in constructing pipelines. 

Moreover, gas will no time soon replace cheap but greenhouse-gas-emitting coal 
in the region. Coal-fired generation is planned to grow fast in Indonesia, 
Malaysia and Vietnam. More hydropower is likely to be used, especially in the 
Mekong region, but again there are environmental concerns as to the impact of 
damming rivers on downstream river life and communities vulnerable to drought. 

Vietnam in particular is finding this a major problem, with exceptionally dry 
seasons in the past two or three years leading to low water levels in 
reservoirs behind hydro dams in the north. There has been competition between 
supply for farmers downriver for rice irrigation and for power generation. This 
in turn has made Vietnam's power planners look to coal-fired generation as well 
as natural gas as means of reducing reliance on hydropower. 

Nuclear power has also emerged in the past 18 months or so as a serious 
possibility in several countries. Vietnam and Indonesia propose large-capacity 
generation plants, possibly coming into operation at the end of the next 
decade. And most recently, the governments of Thailand and Myanmar have put 
forward the idea. Again, there are many issues here, ranging from whether the 
plants would really be economic to safety and weapons-proliferation concerns. 

Motor vehicles - another major source of carbon-dioxide emissions - are set to 
keep filling Southeast Asia's roads. In per capita terms, car ownership is 
still low. But at the same time, in large urban areas, growing car ownership 
continues to congest cities and harm the atmosphere and community health 
through vehicle exhaust. Better public-transport systems - from buses to rail 
overhead and underground systems - are clearly critical but are generally only 
planned for the region's more affluent countries. 

Emission analysis 
Not all the news is bad, however. For instance, Singapore has for decades been 
exemplary in its attention to urban planning and mass transport, including 
extensive use of greenbelts and tree-lined gardens. Bangkok, notorious in the 
past for traffic jams and exhaust pollution, is also now benefiting from its 
light rail and more recent underground rail system, as well as stricter 
standards and controls on gasoline quality. In Vietnam, the fastest-growing 
economy in the region, there are plans for mass-transit systems for the large 
and fast-growing cities of Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh. Whether they can be put in 
place ahead of the expected huge growth in vehicle numbers remains to be seen, 
however. 

Southeast Asia, which justifiably prides itself on the great progress the 
region has made in terms of both political stability and economic development 
since the late 1970s, still faces many pressing socioeconomic challenges. As 
such, concerns over greenhouse-gas emission and climate change do not yet seem 
as pressing as they are now in the developed world. 

Southeast Asia's defenders will point - and rightly so - to the region's low 
per capita emissions of carbon dioxide. And over the medium term, these will 
still be low compared with the developed world. By 2030, APERC projects 4.2 
tons per capita in Southeast Asia, compared with 6.7 in China, 10.8 in Japan, 
21.9 in Australia and 23.0 in the United States. These low per capita figures 
are consistent with still low per capita income levels compared with more 
developed countries, apart from China. 

The popular argument is - and will continue to be - that Southeast Asia's 
economic development should not be penalized through a disproportionate burden 
of greenhouse-gas reduction measures. Further strengthening this perspective is 
the fact that much of the atmosphere's existing carbon-dioxide content has been 
produced by the West and Japan over the past century. This also points to 
another problem with carbon-dioxide mitigation: it can take a century or more 
for carbon dioxide to break down naturally. 

However, the comparison of per capita output on a national basis is arguably 
not sufficiently focused. Looking at national averages does not give a sharp 
enough picture of energy-use patterns and how they might be improved. When 
comparing major urban areas, say Bangkok or Jakarta, with comparable cities in 
the developed world, the per capita emission figures in many cases are not that 
different. Singapore is a case and point. Its per capita carbon-dioxide output 
was a high 12.2 tons in 2002 and is projected by APERC to reach 18.8 tons by 
2030. 

Future analysis would be better based on scientific and economic geography 
rather than nation-states - although national governments clearly remain 
critical and indispensable as far as policy development and implementation are 
concerned. This in turn points to Southeast Asia's particular greenhouse-gas 
challenges. 

Energy use by the region's cities is often extravagant and wasteful, which 
could be improved through better building design, electrical-product standards, 
and transport systems. Set against this are rural areas where millions of 
people live in virtual energy poverty with little or no access to electricity. 
Hence Southeast Asia faces the unique global-warming challenge of both the 
modern urbanized and industrialized world and the agriculture-based developing 
world. And it is increasingly important that it is addressed as such. 

Andrew Symon is a Singapore-based journalist and analyst specializing in energy 
and natural resources. He is currently completing a book on energy in Southeast 
Asia. 

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