Thursday, 21 November 2024
Home Topics Business NGOs accuse ADB of funding coal plants despite clean energy vows
BusinessCoalFinanceNews

NGOs accuse ADB of funding coal plants despite clean energy vows

51
NGOs allege the loan is financing the Suralaya coal plant, which is being expanded to ten units (AFP)
NGOs allege the loan is financing the Suralaya coal plant, which is being expanded to ten units (AFP)

Green NGOs have accused the Asian Development Bank of indirectly financing coal plants in Indonesia through a $600 million loan despite promises to no longer fund projects tied to the fossil fuel, according to a new report.

The report by four NGOs alleges the ADB loan given in 2021 to Indonesia’s state power company to fund its ten-year business plan and “promote the use of clean energy” has no clause blocking spending on new coal facilities.

The Perusahaan Listrik Negara (PLN) plan contains more than a dozen new coal projects, including an expansion at Java island’s Suralaya, one of the biggest coal-fired plants in Southeast Asia, which will add two generating units to eight in operation.

“ADB’s loan agreement doesn’t just fail to exclude coal. It actually allows PLN to use ADB funding for coal-fired power plants,” said Dustin Roasa, research director at Inclusive Development International, which published the report Wednesday.

“The loan’s eligible expenditures expressly cover anything in PLN’s 10-year plan, which does not shy away from new coal.”

The report gives locals’ accounts of how a previous expansion at Suralaya in Banten province neighbouring capital Jakarta “displaced families, reduced fish stocks… and sickened their children”.

‘Robust exclusions’

The impact of pollution from Suralaya costs Indonesia $1 billion every year because of preventable deaths, work absences and medical costs, a study published last year by the Europe-based Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA) said.

“Publicly funded institutions like the Asian Development Bank must include robust coal exclusions in contracts… in order to end coal finance for good,” said Daniel Willis, finance campaigner at NGO Recourse.

The report said the loan entered PLN’s general bank account and was not put into a separate account that could be monitored, allowing it to be spent however PLN wants. It did not claim the loan was directly used to fund Suralaya.

PLN and the ADB did not respond to an AFP request for comment about the report, which was released ahead of the bank’s annual meeting in Georgia next week. The report said the ADB has previously denied the loan could be used for coal-fired power plants.

The bank provides loans and grants for projects in the poorest countries in the Asia-Pacific region and has pledged to not fund “new coal-based capacity for power and heat”.

The ADB has a financing scheme for Asian governments to retire coal plants and in December agreed on a deal with the owners of the Cirebon-1 coal-fired power plant in Indonesia to shut it down seven years early.

Related Articles

FILE PHOTO: The logo of American multinational oil and gas corporation ExxonMobil is seen during the LNG 2023 energy trade show in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, July 12, 2023. REUTERS/Chris Helgren/File Photo
ChemicalsCourtsIndustryOilPolitics

Exxon, under fire over plastic recycling, spending $200 million to expand Texas plants

California filed a lawsuit against Exxon alleging the company was deliberately misleading...

People walk with the Baku Olympic Stadium in the background during the the UN climate summit (Peter Dejong/AP)
Climate FinancePoliticsUnited Nations

UN chief tells countries to ‘soften hard lines’ amid deadlock in climate talks

“Amidst geopolitical divisions and uncertainties, the world needs countries to come together...

FILE PHOTO: A drilling rig on a lease owned by Oasis Petroleum performs logging operations in the Permian Basin oil and natural gas producing area near Wink, Texas U.S. August 22, 2018. Picture taken August 22, 2018. REUTERS/Nick Oxford/File Photo
FuelNatural Gas

US natural gas drillers to lift 2025 output, reversing year of cuts

Rising demand for natural gas exports should boost average annual gas prices...

People walk at the entrance of the venue of the United Nations climate change conference COP29, in Baku, Azerbaijan November 18, 2024. REUTERS/Murad Sezer
Climate FinancePoliticsUnited Nations

New proposals published on COP29 climate finance target

The goal of COP29 is to agree how much money richer countries...

Login into your Account

Please login to like, dislike or bookmark this article.