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COALPHASEOUT
ANDENERGYTRANSITIONPATHWAYS
FORASIAANDTHEPACIFIC
TheshadedareasofthemapindicateESCAPmembersandassociatemembers.*
TheEconomicandSocialCommissionforAsiaandthePacific(ESCAP)servesastheUnitedNations’regionalhub,promotingcooperationamongcountriestoachieveinclusiveandsustainabledevelopment.
Thelargestregionalintergovernmentalplatformwith53memberStatesand9associatemembers,ESCAPhasemergedasastrongregionalthink-tankofferingcountriessoundanalyticalproductsthatshedinsightintotheevolvingeconomic,socialandenvironmentaldynamicsoftheregion.TheCommission’sstrategicfocusistodeliveronthe2030AgendaforSustainableDevelopment,whichitdoesbyreinforcinganddeepeningregionalcooperationandintegrationtoadvanceconnectivity,financialcooperationandmarketintegration.TheresearchandanalysisundertakenbyESCAP,coupledwithitspolicyadvisoryservices,capacitybuildingandtechnicalassistancetogovernmentsaimstosupportcountries’sustainableandinclusivedevelopmentambitions.
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COALPHASEOUT
ANDENERGYTRANSITIONPATHWAYS
FORASIAANDTHEPACIFIC
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COALPHASEOUTANDENERGYTRANSITIONPATHWAYS
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PAGE\*roman
iv
PAGE\*roman
iii
Contents
Acknowledgement v
Executivesummary vi
Introduction 1
Chapter1
Currentsituation,trendsandexpansionplans 3
CurrentroleofcoalforpowergenerationintheAsia-Pacificregion 3
Plannedcoalfiredpowergeneration 6
EmissionsfromcoalpowergenerationnotconsistentwiththeParisAgreement 14
ImpactofCOVID-19crisisonpoliciesforphasingoutofcoalintheSouth-EastAsiasubregion 19
Chapter2
Driversofcoalexpansionintheregion 21
Asiancountriesarejoiningtheglobaltrendawayfromcoal 21
DriversofcoalexpansioninAsiaandthePacific 22
Chapter3
Howcantrendsbereversed–pathwaysforatransitiontocleanenergy 27
ParisAgreementcompatibleenergytransition 27
Renewableenergypotential 35
Comparisonofcostsforrenewableenergyandstoragevs.fossilfueltechnologies 37
Integrationtomaximisebenefitsfromrenewableenergypotential 40
Chapter4
Benefitsofatransitionfromcoaltowardsrenewable-basedefficientenergysystem 41
Accesstocleanandaffordableenergy 41
Employment 42
Health,reducedairandwaterpollution,andimpactonwaterscarcity 42
Avoidedriskofstrandedinvestments 43
Energysecurityandindependence 43
Environmentaldegradation 43
Landuse 44
Shiftinginvestment–opportunitiesforagreenCOVID-19recovery 45
Economicimpactsofclimatechange 46
Chapter5
Conclusionandrecommendations 51
References
59
Annexes
64
Annex1
Asia-Pacificcoalfleetpipeline
64
Annex2
Climatechangeimpacts
65
Listofboxes
Box1\ TheadditionalburdenofCOVID-19 44
Listoffigures
Figure1\
CO2emissionsfromcoalbysector 3
Figure2\
Coalgenerationaspercentageofnationalelectricitygenerationin2019 4
Figure3\
CurrentcoalfleetandpipelineinAsia-Pacificregionbystatusandtechnology 8
Figure4\
Currentcoalfleetandpipeline(left)andagedistribution(right)intheNorthand
CentralAsia(NCA)subregionbystatusandtechnology 10
Figure5\
CurrentcoalfleetandpipelineincountriesintheEastandNorth-Eastsubregion(ENEA)
withstableorcontractingcoalcapacity,bystatusandcombustiontechnology 11
Figure6\
CurrentcoalfleetandpipelineinChina,bystatusandcombustiontechnology 12
Figure7\
Coalcapacitybystatusandtechnology,incountriesintheSouthandSouth-WestAsia
(SSWA)subregionwithhighexpansionplanscomparedtocurrentcapacity 12
Figure8\
CurrentcoalfleetandpipelineinIndiabystatusandtechnology 13
Figure9\
Coalcapacitybystatusandtechnology,(left)andagedistribution(right)forcountries
intheSouth-EastAsian(SEA)subregion(allcategories) 13
Figure10\
Estimatedemissionsovertimeresultingfromcurrentcoal-firedpowergeneration
capacityintheAsia-Pacificregion 14
Figure11\
Estimatedemissionsovertimeresultingfromcurrentcoal-firedpowergeneration
capacityintheNorthandCentralAsiasubregion 15
Figure12\
Estimatedemissionsovertimeresultingfromcurrentcoal-firedpowergeneration
capacityinthecountriesoftheEastandNorth-EastAsiasubregionwithstable
orcontractingcoalcapacity 17
Figure13\
Estimatedemissionsovertimeresultingfromcurrentcoal-firedpowergeneration
capacityintheChina 17
Figure14\
Estimatedemissionsovertimeresultingfromcurrentcoal-firedpowergeneration
capacityinIndia 18
Figure15\
Estimatedemissionsovertimeresultingfromcurrentcoal-firedpowergeneration
capacityinthecountriesoftheSouthandSouth-WestAsiasubregionwithhigh
capacityexpansionplans(Turkey,Pakistan,BangladeshandSriLanka) 18
Figure16\
Estimatedemissionsovertimeresultingfromcurrentcoal-firedpowergeneration
capacityinthecountriesoftheSouth-EastAsiasubregion 19
Figure17\
PotentialcoalgenerationinNon-OECDAsiaagainstParisAgreementbenchmarks 28
Figure18\
Levelizedcostofelectricity–acomparisonbetween
fossilfuelsandrenewable
sources,2019 37
Figure19\
Shiftinenergyinvestmentsfromcurrentpolicytoa1.5pathway 45
Figure20\
ProjectedchangesinGDPpercapitainsubregionsduetochangesinglobalmean
annualtemperature
48
Figure
21\
ProjectedGDPpercapitagainsfromlimiting1.5°Cversus2°Cwarmingbysubregion
49
Figure
22\
ProjectedchangesinclimateextremesoverfiveAsia-Pacificsubregions
67
COALPHASEOUTANDENERGYTRANSITIONPATHWAYS
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PAGE\*roman
iv
PAGE\*roman
v
Listoftables
Table
1\
ShareofcoalinpowergenerationandcapacityintheAsia-Pacificregionbyeconomy
5
Table
2\
ThecoalpipelineintheAsia-Pacificregion:Currentexpansionplansandrecentchanges
7
Table
3\
CountrygroupingsbyAsia-Pacificsubregionandcoalcapacityexpansioncategories
9
Table
4\
ProvidersandrecipientsofthehighestamountofG20internationalpublicfinance
forcoal,2016-2017,annualaverage(millionUnitedStatesdollars)
24
Table
5\
Shareofunabatedcoal-firedpowerintheelectricitysectorfor1.5°Ccompatible
pathwaysatglobal,regionalandnationallevels
33
Table
6\
Benchmarksfortheshareofrenewableenergyforpowergenerationfor1.5°C
ParisAgreementcompatiblepathwaysattheglobal,regionalandnationallevels
34
Table
7\
GlobalandregionalWeightedAverageLCOE(2019$/MWh):Selectedcountries
andregions
39
Table
8\
CoalfleetcapacitypipelineinAsia-Pacificbycombustiontechnologyandfueltype
64
Table
9\
Climateimpactindicators
66
Table
10\
ExtremeindicatorforspecificESCAPmemberStates
68
Acknowledgement
ThisreportwasdevelopedbytheEnergyDivisionofESCAPinpartnershipwithClimateAnalyticsundertheoveralldirectionandguidanceofHongpengLiu,DirectoroftheEnergyDivision,andMichaelWilliamsonSectionChiefoftheEnergyDivision.
KavehZahedi,DeputyExecutiveSecretaryprovidedoverallreviewandguidanceto
finalizethereport.
TheprincipalauthorsfromClimateAnalyticswereAnnaChapman,UrsulaFuentes,GauravGanti,BillHare,KatharinaLehmann-Uschner,FahadSaeedandJessieRuthSchleypen.
ThemaincontributorsfromtheEnergyDivisionincludeMichaelWilliamsonandDavidFerrari.
PeerreviewandvaluablesuggestionswereprovidedbyMatthewGiddenandDeborahRamalopeandXunpengShi.
RobertOlivereditedthemanuscript.ThecoveranddesignlayoutwerecreatedbyLowilEspada.PrachakpornSophoncoordinatedlayoutdesignandproofreading.
MitchellHsieh,KatieElles,KavitaSukanandan,ChristopheManshoven,SompotSuphutthamongkhonandChavalitBoonthanomoftheESCAPCommunicationsandKnowledgeManagementSection,coordinatedthedisseminationofthereport.
COALPHASEOUTANDENERGYTRANSITIONPATHWAYS
FORASIAANDTHEPACIFIC
Executivesummary
TheAsia-Pacificregion,morethananyotherglobalregion,ishighlyreliantonfossilfuels.HowittransitionsawayfromfossilfuelswillbeapivotalissueforAsia-Pacificandtheworldinthecomingyears,inlightofthecurrentandfutureclimateimpactsandthesustainabledevelopmentbenefitspossiblethroughanenergytransition.
Thispaperaimstoprovideinsightsintohowtheregioncantransitionawayfromcoaltoarenewable-basedefficientenergysystemcompatiblewiththeParisAgreementandSustainableDevelopmentGoals(SDGs).Thestudybringstogetherasystematicreviewofliteratureanddatatoprovideabackgroundonthecurrentsituationaswellasdriversofcoalexpansionintheregion,optionsforacleanenergytransitionandthebenefitsofatransition,tohighlightpolicyoptions.Thepaperreviewsthedataoncoal’sshareintheAsia-Pacificregion’spowergenerationandcapacity,andassessesthebenefitsofatransitionawayfromcoal.Itpresentsananalysisontheimpactofgreenhousegasemissionsattheregionallevelaswellasregionalimpactsofglobalwarming,illustratingtheimportancefortheregionofachievingtheParisAgreementgoals.Thepaperconcludeswithareviewofprovenpoliciesbasedonexistingliterature,evaluatingtheirpotentialapplicationintheregiontoproviderecommendationsforGovernmentstoadoptbestpractices.
CoalgenerationisstillexpandinginAsia-Pacific–againstthetrendinotherregions
TheAsia-Pacificregionhasaverylargeshareofcurrentglobalcoalcapacityandgenerationaswellasexpansionplans.Atotalof27countriesintheAsia-Pacificregionaccountforabout76percentofcurrentglobalcoalgenerationcapacityandforalmosttheentire(94percent)globalpipeline1ofcoal-firedpowerplantsunderconstruction,plannedorannounced.ThecountriesintheSouthandSouthWestAsiasubregionwithcoalcapacityatpresentareallexpandingtheircapacity,mostofthemhaveveryhighexpansionplanscomparedwiththeircurrentcapacity,reflectingtheirfast-growingenergysupplyparticularlyelectricitydemand.ThegroupofcountriesinSouthandSouth-WestAsiawithhighexpansionplans(Turkey,PakistanandBangladesh)includeonly2percentofcurrentcoalcapacitywithintheAsia-Pacificregion,but13percentoftheexpansionpipelinewithinthisregion.WhileIndiastillreliesstronglyoncoalforpowergeneration,coal-firedpowergenerationhasdecreasedandthepipelineisshrinking.Withstrongpoliciestoenhancerenewableenergyuptake,thereispotentialforIndiatomoveawayfromcoalfaster.
South-EastAsiaischaracterisedbyparticularlyhighgrowthofdemandinenergy,andinparticularelectricitydemand,andisdominatedbycountrieswithexpansionplans.Itincludes5percentoftheAsianandPacificcoalcapacity,but16percentofitscoalpipeline.Mostofthesubregion’scountriesthathaveexpansionplansalreadyhavehighcapacity(Indonesia,thePhilippines,ThailandandVietNam),twohaveexpansionpipelineslargerthanthecurrentcapacity(VietNamandthePhilippines)andseveralhavecurrentlylowcapacitybutlargeexpansionplans(CambodiaandtheLaoPeople’sDemocraticRepublic).
1“Pipeline”referstocoalfiredpowerplantsunderconstruction,plannedorannounced.,plannedcoalcapacityincludesthosethatareindi?erentstagesofpre-permitdevelopmentorhavereceivedallnecessaryapprovalsbutnotyetbegunconstruction.
vi
Executivesummary
Evenwithoutcountingtheadditionalcapacitythatisinthepipeline,emissionsfromcoal-firedpowergenerationintheAsia-Pacificregionwouldcontinueataveryhighleveluntilafter2040,andwouldonlybephasedoutbyaround2060.ThisisinstarkcontrasttotheneedsoftheParisAgreementLong-termtemperaturegoalwhichwillrequiretheglobalphase-outofunabatedcoalby2040andtheachievementofpeakcoal-firedpowergenerationby2020beforequicklyreducingafterwardsto80percentbelow2010levelsby2030.Existingcoalplantassetsareatriskofbecomingstrandedassets.Anynewcapacitywillbeexposedtoevengreaterrisk,threateningtounnecessarilyincreasethecostoftheenergytransitionandplacingahigherburdenontheemergingeconomiesthatarelessabletoaffordit.Atthesubregionallevel,thisriskisparticularlyhighinthesubregionswithrelativelynewcoalcapacityandlargeexpansionplans,suchasinSouthandSouth-WestAsiaandSouth-EastAsia.
Theglobaltrendofdecliningcoalcapacity,nowexpectedtobeacceleratedbytheCOVID-19pandemic,isdominatedbytrendsoutsideoftheAsia-Pacificregion,particularbyrecordretirementsintheEuropeanUnionandtheUnitedStates.ThepictureintheAsia-Pacificregionisdifferent,withanoverallnetincreaseofcoalcapacityby10GWinthefirsthalfof2020thatwasmainlydrivenbyChina(9.6GW).OutsideofChina,netretirementsintheRepublicofKorea,theRussianFederationandIndiahavebeenalmostcancelledoutbyanetincreaseincapacityinJapan,VietNam,BangladeshandIndonesia.
Lookingforward,thesharpreductionincostofsolarandwindpoweraswellasstoragetechnologies–particularlysolarphotovoltaics(PV)–togetherwithpoliciesagainstairpollution,increasingadoptionofclimatechangepoliciesaswellasawarenessoftheneedtophaseoutcoaltodelivertheaimsoftheParisAgreement,isleadingtoanincreasingmovetophaseoutcoalforpowergenerationatthenationalorsubnationallevel.Therearealsoclearsignsofanincreasingaversiontowardsfinancingnewcoal-firedpowerplantsamongmanygovernmentandinvestors,giventhesetrendsandtheincreasingawarenessoftheriskofstrandedassets.
DriversintheAsia-Pacificregionofsupportforcoalandexpansionofcoal-firedpowergeneration
Contrarytotheglobaldriversretardingtheuseofcoal,therearefactorsthatarestilldrivingsupportforcoalandexpansionofcoal-firedpowergenerationwithinmanycountriesintheAsia-Pacificregion.Theseinclude:highdemandgrowthinSouthandSouth-EastAsia;thepresenceofalargeshare(morethan60percent)ofglobalcoalreservesintheregion;andahighdependencyonincomefromcoalexportsinsomeofthecountriesintheregionwhoseGovernmentssupportcoalminingandcoal-firedpowergeneration,includingthroughsubsidiesandpublicfinance.
SupportforcoalintheAsia-Pacificregionisdrivenbythegeopoliticalinfluenceoffourcountries–China,Japan,theRepublicofKoreaandIndia–thathavehistoricallyreliedoncoalandarelargecoalimporters.Governments,government-ownedfinancialinstitutionsorgovernment-ownedutilitiesinthosefourcountriesarestronglysupportingcoalexpansionintheregion.ThemainrecipientsofthissupportarecountriesinSouthandSouth-EastAsia–Bangladesh,Indonesia,PakistanandVietNam.Internationalsupportintheregionandthelargeinfluenceofthecoalindustryonnationalpolicyanddecision-makinghassupportedthecontinuingprevalenceofthenarrativeofsupposedlycheapcoalandtheneedtoprovide“baseloadpower”toaddressthegrowingenergydemand.Thisnarrativeiskeptalivebyvestedinterestslargelyfavouringcoal.Togetherwithinconsistentpolicysignalsanduncertaintyregardinglong-termgoalsaswellascomplexenergypolicyresponsibilitieswithinGovernmentswiththestronginfluenceofstate-ownedsourceshasledtoinvestorsholdingbackmorethaninotherregions.Ithasalsoresultedinadelayinthedevelopmentofpoliciesandenergyplansneededtoovercomebarrierstofasterexpansionandintegrationoflargersharesofrenewableenergy,especiallywindandsolar.
vii
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Benchmarksandbenefits–pathwaysto100percentrenewableenergyinlinewiththeParis
AgreementandSustainableDevelopmentGoals
Basedonmultiplelinesofevidence,arangeofbenchmarksforthepowersectorhavebeendevelopedthroughanin-depthanalysisofmodellingstudies,withbetween50to80/85percentofrenewableenergyshareachievableby2030inSouthandSouth-EastAsiaby2030,onapathwaytowards100%renewableelectricitygenerationby2050.UtilizationofsolarandwindcouldsatisfytheneedsofalmostallSouthandSouth-EastAsiancountriesmanytimesover.Renewableenergycostshaverapidlyfallenduringthepast10yearsduetotechnologyimprovements,economiesofscale,competitioninrenewableenergysupplychainsandadvancingindustryexperience.SolarPVisnowthecheapestsourceofnewelectricitygenerationinmostpartsoftheworld,includingcountriesinSouthandevenSouth-EastAsia,whichhadshownhighercostsinthepast.Feasiblecostreductionsof40-50percentinsolarPVinIndonesia,ThailandandVietNamaswellas15-45percentforonshorewind–resultingmainlyfromindustriallearningcurvesthroughouttheworld–showthatthereispotentialforcontinuedcostreduction.
Theregionalintegrationofpowergridsoffersnumerousfurtheradvantagesforrenewableenergyresourcesharingandcostreduction,withlargergridintegrationandtransmissionprovidingmoreflexibilityandlessneedforadditionalstorage.Anemergingoptioninadditiontolargerregionalgridintegrationistradeofgreenhydrogenproducedfromrenewableelectricity,wherecountrieswithstrongrenewablefullloadhoursprovidecost-efficientgreenhydrogen.
TheAsia-Pacificregionhascountriesthatareextremelyvulnerabletoclimatechange,makingitthemostdisaster-proneregionglobally.However,substantialavoidanceofseverityoffutureclimateextremescanbeachievediftheglobaltemperatureincreaseiskepttotheParisAgreement’s1.5°Climit,comparedtoeither2oCwarmingorthelikelyresultfromtheNDCs–anincreaseof3°C.Thisemphasizestheneedofearlyandsubstantiveeffortstocurbgreenhousegasemissions,andreinforcestheurgencyoftransformativechangeintheenergysystemofcountries,regionallyaswellasontheglobalscale.
Three-quartersofallpeopleaffectedbynaturaldisastersworldwidearelivingintheAsia-Pacificregion.Theaverageannualeconomiclossfromnaturaldisastersisnowestimatedtobe2.4percentofGDP,withanexpectedclearupwardtrendwhentemperaturescontinuetorise.IncreasedglobalwarmingisprojectedtoleadtosubstantialchangesinGDPpercapita.AlmosthalfoftheAsia-PacificcountriesconsideredinthisanalysisareprojectedtoexperienceGDPlossesbetween30and41percentbytheendofthecenturycomparedtothebaselinescenario.CleargainsinGDPpercapitaofupto12percentinmid-centuryandupto18.3percentbytheendofthecenturyareexpectedforcountriesinthePacific,South-EastAsia,andSouthandSouthWestAsiainachieving1.5°Criseinsteadof2°C.ThelargestgainsareexpectedinThailand,Cambodia,Bangladesh,theLaoPeople’sDemocraticRepublicandVietNam.
Renewableenergyprovidesalargerangeofbenefitsforsustainabledevelopment:
Renewableenergycanbedeployedrapidly,andinareasthatarenotconnectedtothegrid,important
foraregionwherenotallofthepopulationhasaccesstoelectricity;
Installationofrenewableenergycanreplacefossilimportscreatingsecurityandalsoavoidprice
fluctuationsoffossilfuelimports;
Renewableenergyprovidesemploymentopportunities,andemploymentiscrucialforpost-COVID-19
recovery;
Phasingoutcoalreducesair,waterandsoilpollutionaswellasnegativeimpactsonwaterqualityandwaterscarcity.
viii
Executivesummary
PolicyrecommendationsforkeyactorsintheAsia-Pacificregion
DrawingfromtheanalysisofcurrenttrendsanddriversintheAsia-Pacificregion,thegapwithParisAgreementbenchmarksforphasingoutcoalandacceleratingthetransitiontocleanenergy,aswellastheoverviewofpolicyareasincludingbestpracticeexamplesinotherregions,thisstudyhasformulatedthefollowingrecommendationsforkeyactorsintheAsia-PacificregiontoacceleratephasingoutcoalinlinewiththeParisAgreementbenchmarks:
1
NationalGovernments:Adoptbestpracticepolicies–phaseoutfossilfuelsubsidies,carbonpricing,renewableenergysupport,encourageandpushshiftsininvestmentthroughgreenrecovery
Phasingoutfossilfuelsubsidies,combinedwiththedevelopmentofcarbonpricingandtargetedadoptionofkeybestpracticepoliciestoenhancetheshareofvariablerenewableenergyandaccelerateinvestment–particularlyinwindandsolar–throughmarketdesign,demand-sidemanagement,transmissionanddistributionsystemenhancements,gridinterconnectionsandsupportforenergystoragearecrucial.GreenrecoveryneedstobeattheheartofeconomicstimuluspackagesdevelopedbyGovernments.Thisneedsafocustobeplacedondirectingpublicfundingandincentivisingprivateinvestmentstowardsrenewableenergyandrelatedtechnologyandinfrastructuredevelopment,suchasstorageandtransmissiongrids,aswellasonelectrificationofend-usesectorsandfurthermeasurestoimproveenergyefficiencyacrossend-usesectors.
2
NationalGovernments:Movetotransformationalpolicies,targetsandlong-termplanning
TheneedtoratchetupNDCtargetsanddeveloplong-termlowcarbondevelopmentstrategiesinthecontextoftheParisAgreementisanimportantstep,asthesegoalswereduein2020andareexpectednolaterthan2021.Developingcoalphase-outplansby2040isthesinglemostimportantstepthatneedstobeincludedinthesetargetstoensureconsistencywiththeParisAgreementandSDGs.Thisneedstobecombinedwithaprocessofplanningandmanagingthetransitionthatisdevelopedwithstakeholdersfromtheregionsaffected,particularlythosethatcurrentlydependonemploymentandincomefromcoalminingandcoal-firedpowergeneration.
3
Clearpathwaystoenableanticipationofchangeandavoidanceofmorestrandedassets
AnimportantelementinelaboratingNDCtargetsandlong-termstrategiesinlinewiththeParisagreementisthedevelopmentofscenariosandanalysis,involvingandinformingstakeholdersandsupportingadialogueaboutbenefitsatthesectorallevel.Akeygapinleadingthedevelopmentofbothnationalandregionalstrategies,plansandpoliciesistheneedtodeveloparangeofscenariosfortheenergysystemthatareinlinewiththeParisAgreementandSDGs,andtoaimfor100percentrenewableenergy.
4
Financialsupportandcapacity-building
CountriesintheAsia-Pacificregionthatareinthepositiontodoso,needtofocustheirfinancialandotherdevelopmentsupportonshiftinginvestmentsandenergysystemtransformationtowardscleanenergy.ThisholdstrueforAustralia,Japan,theRepublicofKorea,ChinaandIndia,whichcurrentlyplayastrongroleincementingdependencyonfossilfuelsinpoorercountriesintheregion,particularlyintheSouthandSouth-EastAsiansubregions.CoordinationofGovernmentdonorswithphilanthropybytheprivatesectorcanbeanimportantstrategy.ThisapproachhasstartedwithafocusonSouth-EastAsia,butitalsoneedstobeappliedtoothercountriesintheAsia-Pacificregion,particularlywhereinvestmentinnewcoalorgas-poweredgenerationisonlyjuststarting.
ix
COALPHASEOUTANDENERGYTRANSITIONPATHWAYS
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5
Regionalandinternationalcooperation–alignmentwithParisAgreementGoals,engagingstakeholders,theprivatesectorandcivilsociety
RegionalandinternationalcooperationintheAsia-Pacificregioncanplayanimportantrole.CountriesintheregioncaneitherjoinexistinginitiativessuchasthePoweringPastCoalAlliance.ThisandotherrecentinitiativesintheareaofenergysystemtransformationareoftensuccessfulwhentheyincludeGovernmentsatboththenationalandsubnationallevelsaswellastheprivatesector,researchorganisationsandcivilsocietyinordertobeeffectiveinmobilisingstakeholderengagementandsupportingashiftinnarrativeandperception.Aninitiativeattheregionallevelcouldalsofocusonjoiningeffortstoovercomebarrierst
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