Thursday, November 21, 2024

SCG delays ammonia and green hydrogen production

Reading Time: < 1 minute
Julian Isaac

Journalist

Editor

Interview

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.

“Actually, hydrogen is still very expensive. To do it (production), no one will pay,” Thammasak Sethaudom, President & CEO of SCG, said on Tuesday, November 19, 2024.

The company has implemented several initiatives in achieving growth accompanied by environmental concerns, such as the construction of a refused derived fuel (RDF) factory or fuel from waste at the Final Disposal Site (TPA) in Cimenteng, Sukabumi, West Java.

“If we use the idea from Cimenteng, it is also green. It is green and will eliminate very smelly and dirty waste. This is green growth because it helps reduce costs,” he said.

Warit Jintanawan, Country Director of SCG in Indonesia, said that the energy transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy is also a strategy for implementing Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) principle with a significant portion in SCG’s business in Indonesia.

“By reducing dependence on fossil fuels, we help reduce the risk of climate change and improve people’s quality of life,” Jintanawan said.

“These benefits will be felt in the long term when the availability of natural resources is sufficient for the next generation,” he added.

He concluded that the energy transition can also maintain environmental conduciveness so that it can create economic opportunities, such as attracting foreign investment and creating new jobs.

Julian Isaac

Journalist

 

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.
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.
Pertamina New and Renewable Energy (Pertamina NRE), in collaboration with PT Sinergi Gula Nusantara (SGN), plans to construct a bioethanol plant in Banyuwangi, East Java, with an annual production capacity of 30,000 kiloliters.