Challenges facing Việt Nam in ensuring energy security
HÀ NỘI - Việt Nam needs an enormous amount of energy to feed its development,
but relying on coal and hydropower is not the answer, and with new measures
still at an early stage, experts are concerned about the future.
Wind turbines of Đầm Nại power project in Ninh Hải
and Thuận Bắc districts in the south-central province of Ninh Thuận, slated
to enter commercial production in the final quarter of 2018. — VNA/VNS Photo
Nguyễn Thành
Việt Nam’s
demand for energy rises by an average 9.5 per cent year-on-year in the last
15 years, reaching 13 per cent increase in 2006-11 and 11 per cent in 2011-16
period.
According to
Việt Nam Energy Outlook 2017 report released last September, imported energy
could account for 37.5 per cent of its total supplies in 2025 and more
than half (58.5 per cent) in 2035.
Vietnamese
economy has transformed itself from an agrarian economy which relied
primarily on traditional biomass fuels, to a modern mixed economy, one of the
fastest growing ones in the world, resulting in rapid changes in the energy
sector.
According to
the Electricity and Renewable Energy Department under the Ministry of
Industry and Trade (MoIT), oil, coal, natural gas, hydropower and
non-commercial biomass (woods, agricultural waste) are the main primary
domestic energy sources. In recent years, the total output of these forms of
energy doesn’t witness any substantial change, the department said.
Nguyễn Văn
Thành, deputy head of the department, said after more than 10 years of implementing
Việt Nam National Energy Development Strategy 2020, “in general, the energy
sector has seen positive results, evidence in the achievement of several
targets,” especially ones dealing with electricity access in rural areas or
meeting socio-economic energy demands.
According to
the department’s report, total electricity
production and purchase of the State-owned Electricity Việt Nam (EVN) reached
192.45 billion kWh, up 8.6 per cent compared to the previous year; the
national power sales achieved 174.05 billion kWh, an increase of 8.92 per
cent.
Việt Nam scored 78.69/100 points in
the Getting Electricity indicator (part of Word Bank’s Doing Business index)
and ranked 64th out of 190 nations and economies, moving up 32 places against
2016.
Installed generating
capacity of Việt Nam in 2015, for example, reached 39,350MW, up 1.8 times
compared to five years before, and ranking second in ASEAN countries.
However, the
energy sector failed to meet set targets on oil refinement and oil reserves,
nuclear energy, or connecting its electrical lines and natural gas supply
lines with other countries in Southeast Asia.
The
Government originally aimed to refine 30-35 million tonnes of oil a year by
2020, but going on the current rate, realistically, it will only meet half
its goal (16.5 million tonnes) in two years’ time.
Việt Nam
still doesn’t have its own oil reserves, and can currently only hold 30 days’
worth of oil for commercial purposes while the goal is to maintain stable
storage worth 45 days of usage in 2010, and 60 days of usage in 2020, in a
bid to offset price volatility.
One of the
energy sector’s strategic power connectivity plans is to link with regional
countries’ power grids on the 500kV transmission lines, but so far, Việt Nam
is only capable of purchasing/selling contracts with China or Laos on the
220kV lines. A natural gas linkage with regional countries, similarly,
remains a pipe dream.
Reliance on imports
According to
Trần Văn Tùng, deputy minister of science and technology, the country’s
energy sector is facing ‘layered challenges.’
On one hand,
the sector needs to produce as much energy as possible to meet the demands of
socio-economic development, on the other hand, it needs to honour
international commitments on sustainable development and reduces reliance on
fossil energy, which is already nearing its limits.
“In the
context of rising demands, near maximum exploitation of hydropower resources,
and the venture into nuclear energy halted indefinitely, Việt Nam has been
importing primary energy sources to produce electricity,” Tùng said.
"The
increase of the ratio of imported energy in the total primary energy output
will have worrying implications for the country’s energy security," he
said.
Regarding
electricity supply, until 2020, the country would not have much to worry
about, said Nguyễn Văn Vy, vice chairman of Việt Nam Energy Association (VEA).
However
after 2020, the prospect of electricity shortage would become more and more
visible, which could be blamed on delayed schedule of several key power
projects, such as the Thái Bình II thermopower plant project by the
State-owned oil and gas group PetroVietnam and other Build-Operate-Transfer
(BOT) projects in the southern region.
Renewable energy
Experts
maintained the only viable way forward for Việt Nam is to focus on renewable
energy to secure its future.
“What we
need right now is mechanisms to stimulate renewable energy projects. Việt Nam
won’t have to be concerned about electricity paucity, provided sufficient
attention and resources are poured into renewable energy, especially solar
energy, given how a project can start from conception to operation within a
year if the paperwork is handled quickly,” Vy told Hải
Quan Cuối Tuần (Customs,
Weekend Edition) newspaper.
Deputy
minister Tùng also agreed that "this is the time Việt Nam needs to make
a breakthrough and master the new energy forms".
“It’s
entirely possible if the authorities, businesses and scientists all work
together, and with the technical expertise support from developed countries
and international energy associations,” Tùng added.
Dr Nguyễn
Thế Mịch, consultant for the German Agency for International Co-operation or
(GIZ), is steadfast in his belief that with its abundant renewable energy
potentials, Việt Nam can even become a net energy exporter by 2050.
However,
with the current progress on solar and wind energy development in Việt Nam,
Mịch is not convinced the country will be able to achieve 6.5 per cent of
renewable energy in the total supplies by 2020.
Installed
capacity of wind energy is now 200 MW, with several new projects slated to be
completed later this year, but even so, the capacity reaches just 360-400MW.
To fulfill the Government’s target of 800MW by 2020, another 400MW is needed
in two years’ time.
“A wind
energy project requires several procedures, calculating wind potentials in at
least 365 days, data analysis and setting up several databases to see the
viability and feasibility of the project. This puts the prospect of attaining
800MW in wind energy by 2020 at risks,” he said.
In addition,
wind energy technology is much more complicated than solar energy, and Việt
Nam is not the producer of equipment, while the Government’s offered feed-in
tariffs (Government’s purchase price) for wind energy stayed at an
unattractive 7.8 cent/kWh.
“GIZ has
proposed the feed-in tariff for onshore wind projects be raised to 8.78
cent/kWh, and 9 cent/kWh for offshore wind projects. This would certainly
draw in quality investors,” Mịch said.
Phạm Phú
Uynh, an energy expert, said the priority must be put on developing renewable
energy technologies domestically.
“Most
renewable energy projects use technologies bought overseas, resulting in
higher production prices compared to the traditional energy forms of
hydropower or thermopower,” Uynh said.
In addition,
the seas of Việt Nam face frequent turbulences and typhoons, therefore, “any
imported wind energy technology should be customised to our natural
conditions first,” he added.
Steve
Sawyer, Secretary General of Global Wind Energy Council, has also expressed
interests in co-operation with the Vietnamese Government in settling legal
bottlenecks and promoting transparency in bidding process to make “Việt Nam
an attractive destination for international investors.”
VNS
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Thứ Ba, 7 tháng 8, 2018
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