不同的电价制度如何影响能源三难困境:评估印尼的电力市场转型

R. Heffron, Marc Körner, Jonathan Wagner, Martin Weibelzahl, G. Fridgen
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引用次数: 4

摘要

许多国家都有增加其可再生能源份额的明确政策目标。然而,提高可再生能源普及率的主要障碍往往在于一个国家电力部门历史上形成的结构。在印度尼西亚,政策制定者一直依靠廉价的化石燃料和国家控制,为民众提供可靠和负担得起的电力。然而,这种只关注能源三难困境中三个角中的两个,即能源安全和能源公平(而不是可持续性),可能会使印度尼西亚面临无法实现其雄心勃勃的可再生能源目标的风险。在这方面,近年来一些促进可再生能源一体化的小规模改革尝试被证明是相对不成功的。与许多其他国家一样,印度尼西亚需要明确的政策方向,以避免不可持续地锁定在化石燃料的未来。在过去几十年里,其他几个国家成功地改组了电力部门,例如在不同的电价制度下引入电力批发市场,包括节点、区域或统一定价。这些国家可能具有宝贵的经验,可以通过市场机制发挥更大的作用,克服历史上形成的阻碍RES成功一体化的障碍。我们开发了三个通用模型,使政策制定者能够分析引入节点定价、区域定价或统一定价体系对本国能源三难困境的影响。我们使用印度尼西亚电力部门的简化网络表示来评估我们的模型。我们的研究结果表明,每种定价系统都能够促进能源三难困境的特定角。考虑到任何旨在提高印尼能源可持续性的重大改革只有在解决能源安全和能源公平的情况下才会取得成功,我们还从能源正义和平衡该国能源三难困境的必要性的角度讨论了我们的结果。最后,我们阐述了一条印尼向低碳经济更可持续、更公正转型的转型之路。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
How Different Electricity Pricing Systems Affect the Energy Trilemma: Assessing Indonesia’s Electricity Market Transition
Many countries have a clear policy objective of increasing their share of renewable energy sources (RESs). However, a major impediment to higher RES penetration often lies in the historically grown structures of a country’s electricity sector. In Indonesia, policy makers have relied on cheap fossil fuels and state control to provide the population with access to both reliable and affordable electricity. However, this focus on only two of the three horns of the energy trilemma, namely energy security and energy equity (and not sustainability), may put Indonesia at risk of missing its ambitious RES targets. In this context, a number of small-scale reform attempts to promote RES integration in recent years have proved to be relatively unsuccessful. Like many other countries, Indonesia needs clear policy directions to avoid an unsustainable lock-in into a fossil fuel future. In the last decades, several other countries have successfully restructured their electricity sectors, for example by introducing a wholesale market for electricity under different electricity pricing systems, including nodal, zonal, or uniform pricing. These countries may hold valuable experiences of overcoming the historically grown barriers to successful RES integration through a greater role for market mechanisms. We develop three generic models that allow policy makers to analyze the impact of introducing either a nodal, a zonal, or a uniform pricing system on the three horns of the energy trilemma in their country. We evaluate our model using a simplified network representation of the Indonesian electricity sector. Our results indicate that each of the pricing systems is able to foster specific horns of the energy trilemma. Considering that any major reform intended to improve energy sustainability in Indonesia will only be a success if it also addresses energy security and energy equity, we also discuss our results from the perspective of energy justice and the need to balance the country’s energy trilemma. Ultimately, we illustrate a transformation pathway for a more sustainable and just transition to a low-carbon economy in Indonesia.
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