Saturday, November 23, 2024

Pertamina Geothermal provides investment opportunities for G20 countries

Reading Time: 2 minutes
Julian Isaac

Journalist

yan

Editor

Interview

The subsidiary of the state-owned oil-and-gas giant PT Pertamina opens opportunities for G20 countries to invest in Indonesia in the sustainable energy sector to accelerate energy transition. The company’s subsidiary PT Pertamina Geothermal Energy (PGE) offered potential investors to increase geothermal capacity in North Sulawesi.

PGE was founded in 2006 in the geothermal power sector and produces steam and electricity. PGE is a subsidiary or sub-holding of Pertamina Power & New Renewable Energy (PNRE) which explores, exploits and produces geothermal energy. The company has 15 workplaces in Indonesia as of 2020. By 2022, the ownership consists of 92.0194% of PT Pertamina Power Indonesia and 7.9806% of PT Pertamina Pedeve Indonesia.

PGE: Geothermal opportunities for G20 countries

“PGE invites G20 member countries to work together in developing geothermal energy in Indonesia as a solution in dealing with major issues such as global warming and decarbonization towards a net zero emission 2060,” PGE President Director Ahmad Yuniarto said during the G20 Sustainable Finance For Climate Action event in Nusa Dua, Bali, on July 18, 2022.

He added that the company would soon create its five-year roadmap of capacity development for the renewable energy load in Indonesia. 

Yuniarto said that there are three types of partnership that can be offered namely Co-generation, Co-production and Co-development. “And there are four areas that can be done together, such as: the use of CO2 for alternative fuels; the extraction of nanomaterials by utilizing valuable content in geothermal fluids; the green hydrogen as a future fuel and green methanol; There is also this development that can be built, the Geo-eco-tourism and Geo-agro industry,” he added.

PGE is currently trying to initiate increasing geothermal energy through the construction of a Binary Unit in Tomohon, North Sulawesi, which produces 25MW (megaWatts).

Challenges for geothermal renewable energy in Indonesia

According to the Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources (ESDM), Indonesia has 23.7GW (gigaWatts) of geothermal reserves. PGE is committed to ensuring that the implementation of the Environment, Social and Governance (ESG) runs smoothly.

However, obstacles remain, as quoted from money.kompas.com, the challenge for renewable energy power plants is on the economic side, which is considered to be more expensive than fossil fuels. In addition to that, the system readiness and the continuity of electricity supply are required.

Low-cost and large-capacity renewable energy plants such as hydropower plants, mini-hydropower plants and geothermal power plants are also located in remote conservation areas and take relatively long to build, not to mention the existing problem of permits and price regulations from Indonesia’s State Electricity Company, PT. PLN (Perusahaan Listrik Negara). Some of these factors are quite the challenges that must be faced by Indonesian and investors to achieve its target in the renewable energy sector.

Julian Isaac

Journalist

yan

Editor

 

Interview

SUBSCRIBE NOW
We will provide you with an invoice for your reimbursable expenses.

Free

New to Indonesian market? Read our free articles before subscribing to the premium plan. If you already run your business in Indonesia, make sure to subscribe to the premium subscription so you won’t miss any intelligence & business opportunities.

Premium

$550 USD/Year

or

$45 USD/Month

Cancelation: you can cancel your subscription at any time, by sending us an email inquiry@ibp-media.com

Add keywords to your market watch and receive notification:
Schedule a free consultation with us:

We’ll contact you for confirmation.

FURTHER READING

Seamless steel tube producer PT Rainbow Tubulars Manufacture (RTM), a subsidiary of PT Sunindo Pratama (SUNI), has set the target for the new plant under construction to operate commercially in third quarter of 2025.
Cement and building material company Siam Cement Group (SCG) says it is not interested in producing ammonia and green hydrogen in the near future upon learning form results of the company’s own study that the production cost of the two gases is still too costly.
Krakatau Chandra Energi (KCE), a subsidiary of PT Chandra Asri Pacific (TPIA), has planned to expand into a number of renewable energy projects, through the acquisition of hydropower plants (PLTMH) in Java. This acquisition aims to increase the capacity of the green energy mix in supporting the sustainability of the company’s operations.
The President Prabowo Subianto administration has plans to increase electricity capacity by 103 gigawatts (GW) in 15 years, some 75 GW of which will come from new and renewable energy plants, 5 GW from nuclear power plants, and the rest from gas-powered plants.
State-owned telecommunicatiion company PT Telekomunikasi Indonesia (Telkom) has set an ambitious target to build data centers with a total capacity of 500 megawatts (MW) by 2030 in line with the company’s commitment to environmental sustainability.
Telecommunications company Indosat Ooredoo Hutchison has expressed commitment to establish an AI center in Central Java, with further plans to expand to Jakarta and Jayapura, noting that the company has requested three key areas of support from the Prabowo Subianto administration.